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Understanding the multiframe caricature advantage for recognizing facial composites
Authors:Charlie D. Frowd  Faye Skelton  Chris Atherton  Melanie Pitchford  Vicki Bruce  Rebecca Atkins
Affiliation:1. School of Psychology , University of Central Lancashire , Preston , UK cfrowd@uclan.ac.uk;3. School of Psychology , University of Central Lancashire , Preston , UK;4. Department of Psychology , Lancaster University , Lancaster , UK;5. School of Psychology , Newcastle University , Newcastle , UK
Abstract:Eyewitnesses often construct a “composite” face of a person they saw commit a crime, a picture that police use to identify suspects. We described a technique (Frowd, Bruce, Ross, McIntyre, & Hancock, 2007) based on facial caricature to facilitate recognition of these images: Correct naming substantially improves when composites are seen with progressive positive caricature, where distinctive information is enhanced, and then with progressive negative caricature, the opposite. Over the course of four experiments, the underpinnings of this mechanism were explored. Positive-caricature levels were found to be largely responsible for improving naming of composites, with some benefit from negative-caricature levels. Also, different frame-presentation orders (forward, reverse, random, repeated) facilitated equivalent naming benefit relative to static composites. Overall, the data indicate that composites are usually constructed as negative caricatures.
Keywords:Caricature  Face space  Facial composite  Memory  Witness
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