21 research outputs found
An evaluation of US systems for facial composite production
Witness and victims of serious crime are normally requested to construct a facial composite of a suspectâs face. While modern systems for constructing composites have been evaluated extensively in the UK, this is not the case in the US. In the current work, two popular computerized systems in the US, FACES and Identikit 2000, were evaluated against a âreferenceâ system, PRO-fit, where performance is established. In Experiment 1, witnesses constructed a composite with both PRO-fit and FACES using a realistic procedure. The resulting composites were very poorly named, but the PRO-fit emerged best in âcuedâ naming and two supplementary measures: composite sorting and likeness ratings. In Experiment 2, PRO-fit was compared with Identikit 2000, a sketch-like feature system. Spontaneous naming was again very poor, but both cued naming and sorting suggested that the systems were similar. The results support previous findings that modern systems do not produce identifiable composites
How CrossâExamination on Subjectivity and Bias Affects Jurorsâ Evaluations of Forensic Science Evidence
Contextual bias has been widely discussed as a possible problem in forensic science. The trial simulation experiment reported here examined reactions of jurors at a county courthouse to crossâexamination and arguments about contextual bias in a hypothetical case. We varied whether the key prosecution witness (a forensic odontologist) was crossâexamined about the subjectivity of his interpretations and about his exposure to potentially biasing taskâirrelevant information. Jurors found the expert less credible and were less likely to convict when the expert admitted that his interpretation rested on subjective judgment, and when he admitted having been exposed to potentially biasing taskâirrelevant contextual information (relative to when these issues were not raised by the lawyers). The findings suggest, however, that forensic scientists can immunize themselves against such challenges and maximize the weight jurors give their evidence by adopting context management procedures that blind them to taskâirrelevant information
The Impact of Fillers on Lineup Performance
Filler siphoning theory posits that the presence of fillers (known innocents) in a lineup protects an innocent suspect
from being chosen by siphoning choices away from that innocent suspect. This mechanism has been proposed as
an explanation for why simultaneous lineups (viewing all lineup members at once) induces better performance than
showups (one-person identification procedures). We implemented filler siphoning in a computational model (WITNESS,
Clark, Applied Cognitive Psychology 17:629â654, 2003), and explored the impact of the number of fillers (lineup size)
and filler quality on simultaneous and sequential lineups (viewing lineups members in sequence), and compared
both to showups. In limited situations, we found that filler siphoning can produce a simultaneous lineup performance
advantage, but one that is insufficient in magnitude to explain empirical data. However, the magnitude of the empirical
simultaneous lineup advantage can be approximated once criterial variability is added to the model. But this modification
works by negatively impacting showups rather than promoting more filler siphoning. In sequential lineups, fillers were
found to harm performance. Filler siphoning fails to clarify the relationship between simultaneous lineups and sequential
lineups or showups. By incorporating constructs like filler siphoning and criterial variability into a computational model,
and trying to approximate empirical data, we can sort through explanations of eyewitness decision-making, a prerequisite
for policy recommendations.Charges for publication of this article sponsored by University of Oklahoma Libraries Open Access/Subvention Fund.Ye
Configural and featural information in facial-composite images
Eyewitnesses are often invited to construct a facial composite, an image created of the person they saw commit a crime that is used by law enforcement to locate criminal suspects. In the current paper, the effectiveness of composite images was investigated from traditional feature systems (E-FIT and PRO-fit), where participants (face constructors) selected individual features to build the face, and a more recent holistic system (EvoFIT), where they ‘evolved' a composite by repeatedly selecting from arrays of complete faces. Further participants attempted to name these composites when seen as an unaltered image, or when blurred, rotated, linearly stretched or converted to a photographic negative. All of the manipulations tested reduced correct naming of the composites overall except (i) for a low level of blur, for which naming improved for holistic composites but reduced for feature composites, and (ii) for 100% linear stretch, for which a substantial naming advantage was observed. Results also indicated that both featural (facial elements) and configural (feature spacing) information was useful for recognition in both types of composite system, but highly-detailed information was more accurate in the feature-based than the holistic method. The naming advantage of linear stretch was replicated using a forensically more-practical procedure with observers viewing an unaltered ¬composite sideways. The work is valuable to police practitioners and designers of facial-composite systems