Abstract
Deciding whether the mass spectra of seized drug evidence and a reference standard are measurements of two different compounds is a central challenge in forensic chemistry. Normally, an analyst will compute a mass spectral similarity score between spectra from the sample and reference and make a judgment using both the score and their visual interpretation of the spectra. This approach is inherently subjective and not ideal when rapid assessment of several samples is necessary. Making decisions using only the score and a threshold value greatly improves analysis throughput and removes analyst-to-analyst subjectivity, but selecting an appropriate threshold is itself a non-trivial task. In this manuscript, we describe and evaluate the min max test – a simple and objective method for classifying mass spectra that leverages replicate measurements from each sample to remove analyst subjectivity. We demonstrate that the min max test has an intuitive interpretation for decision-making, and its performance exceeds thresholding with similarity scores even when the best performing threshold for a fixed dataset is prescribed. Determining whether the underlying framework of the min-max test can incorporate retention indices for objectively deciding whether spectra are measurements of the same compound is on-going work.