Enabling witnesses to actively explore faces and reinstate study-test pose during a lineup increases discriminability

Marlene Meyer, Melissa F Colloff, Tia C Bennett, Edward Hirata, Amelia Kohl, Laura M Stevens, Harriet M J Smith, Tobias Staudigl, Heather D Flowe*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Accurate witness identification is a cornerstone of police inquiries and national security investigations. However, witnesses can make errors. We experimentally tested whether an interactive lineup, a recently introduced procedure that enables witnesses to dynamically view and explore faces from different angles, improves the rate at which witnesses identify guilty over innocent suspects compared to procedures traditionally used by law enforcement. Participants encoded 12 target faces, either from the front or in profile view, and then attempted to identify the targets from 12 lineups, half of which were target present and the other half target absent. Participants were randomly assigned to a lineup condition: simultaneous interactive, simultaneous photo, or sequential video. In the front-encoding and profile-encoding conditions, Receiver Operating Characteristics analysis indicated that discriminability was higher in interactive compared to both photo and video lineups, demonstrating the benefit of actively exploring the lineup members' faces. Signal-detection modeling suggested interactive lineups increase discriminability because they afford the witness the opportunity to view more diagnostic features such that the nondiagnostic features play a proportionally lesser role. These findings suggest that eyewitness errors can be reduced using interactive lineups because they create retrieval conditions that enable witnesses to actively explore faces and more effectively sample features.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2301845120
Number of pages8
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume120
Issue number41
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Oct 2023

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Mental Recall
  • Recognition, Psychology
  • Law Enforcement
  • Police
  • Guilt

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