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Age-progressed images may harm recognition of missing children by increasing the number of plausible targets
Authors:Steve D. Charman  Rolando N. Carol
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, United States;2. Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, United States;1. University of Constantine3, faculty of architecture and urbanism, management department, LAVMF laboratory;2. University of Constantine3, faculty of architecture and urbanism, management department, LAVMF laboratory
Abstract:Age progression, often used to help find missing children, is a technique whereby an outdated photograph of an individual is used to generate an updated image of that individual. Despite its importance, few empirical psychological studies have tested the utility of age progression. The current studies had two purposes: (1) to empirically test the effectiveness of a computerized age-progression system (APRILage); and (2) to examine how the presentation of an age-progressed image changes observers’ decision-making strategies. Presenting participants with an age-progressed image in addition to an outdated image resulted in fewer target recognitions and more mistaken non-target ‘recognitions’ (Study 1; N = 135), led participants to assign fewer confidence points to the actual target and more confidence points to non-targets (Study 2; N = 231), and increased, rather than decreased, the number of plausible targets (Study 3; N = 88). Results are explained within a multidimensional face-space conceptualization of facial recognition.
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