Individual differences in eyewitness accuracy across multiple lineups of faces
Individual differences in eyewitness accuracy across multiple lineups of faces
Theories of face recognition in cognitive psychology stipulate that the hallmark of accurate identification is the ability to recognize a person consistently, across different encounters. In this study, we apply this reasoning to eyewitness identification by assessing the recognition of the same target person repeatedly, over six successive lineups. Such repeat identifications are challenging and can be performed only by a proportion of individuals, both when a target exhibits limited and more substantial variability in appearance across lineups (Experiments 1 and 2). The ability to do so correlates with individual differences in identification accuracy on two established tests of unfamiliar face recognition (Experiment 3). This indicates that most observers have limited facial representations of target persons in eyewitness scenarios, which do not allow for robust identification in most individuals, partly due to limitations in their ability to recognize unfamiliar faces. In turn, these findings suggest that consistency of responses across multiple lineups of faces could be applied to assess which individuals are accurate eyewitnesses.
Russ, Andrew J
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Sauerland, Melanie
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Lee, Charlotte E
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Bindemann, Markus
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12 August 2018
Russ, Andrew J
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Sauerland, Melanie
6322b0ee-e3f8-43e4-8be1-30e8637c6a8d
Lee, Charlotte E
b2006537-d679-4d48-a79b-ea44d75b30e6
Bindemann, Markus
d3d09e42-a259-4955-b530-00ef5643c4d8
Russ, Andrew J, Sauerland, Melanie, Lee, Charlotte E and Bindemann, Markus
(2018)
Individual differences in eyewitness accuracy across multiple lineups of faces.
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 3, [30 (2018)].
(doi:10.1186/s41235-018-0121-8).
Abstract
Theories of face recognition in cognitive psychology stipulate that the hallmark of accurate identification is the ability to recognize a person consistently, across different encounters. In this study, we apply this reasoning to eyewitness identification by assessing the recognition of the same target person repeatedly, over six successive lineups. Such repeat identifications are challenging and can be performed only by a proportion of individuals, both when a target exhibits limited and more substantial variability in appearance across lineups (Experiments 1 and 2). The ability to do so correlates with individual differences in identification accuracy on two established tests of unfamiliar face recognition (Experiment 3). This indicates that most observers have limited facial representations of target persons in eyewitness scenarios, which do not allow for robust identification in most individuals, partly due to limitations in their ability to recognize unfamiliar faces. In turn, these findings suggest that consistency of responses across multiple lineups of faces could be applied to assess which individuals are accurate eyewitnesses.
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s41235-018-0121-8
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Published date: 12 August 2018
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Local EPrints ID: 494374
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494374
ISSN: 2365-7464
PURE UUID: 07cf30b8-297b-47b6-a5c9-debe66bec6c0
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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2024 16:40
Last modified: 07 Oct 2024 16:49
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Author:
Andrew J Russ
Author:
Melanie Sauerland
Author:
Charlotte E Lee
Author:
Markus Bindemann
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