The impact of external facial features on the construction of facial composites

Brown, Charity, Portch, Emma, Skelton, Faye Collette orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-4792-4238, Fodarella, Cristina orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-5551-3450, Kuivaniemi-Smith, Heidi, Herold, Kate, Hancock, Peter J.B. and Frowd, Charlie orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-5082-1259 (2019) The impact of external facial features on the construction of facial composites. Ergonomics, 62 (4). pp. 575-592. ISSN 0014-0139

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/00140139.2018.1556816

Abstract

Witnesses may construct a composite face of a perpetrator using a computerised interface. Police practitioners guide witnesses through this unusual process, the goal being to produce an identifiable image. However, any changes a perpetrator makes to their external facial-features may interfere with this process. In Experiment 1, participants constructed a composite using a holistic interface one day after target encoding. Target faces were unaltered, or had altered external-features: (i) changed hair, (ii) external-features removed or (iii) naturally-concealed external-features (hair, ears, face-shape occluded by a hooded top). These manipulations produced composites with more error-prone internal-features: participants’ familiar with a target’s unaltered appearance less often provided a correct name. Experiment 2 applied external-feature alterations to composites of unaltered targets; although whole-face composites contained less error-prone internal-features, identification was impaired. Experiment 3 replicated negative effects of changing target hair on construction and tested a practical solution: selectively concealing hair and eyes improved identification.


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