A forensically valid comparison of facial composite systems

Frowd, Charlie orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-5082-1259, Carson, D, Ness, H and Richardson, J (2005) A forensically valid comparison of facial composite systems. Psychology, Crime & Law, 11 (1). pp. 33-52. ISSN 1068-316X

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/10683160310001634313

Abstract

An evaluation of E-FIT, PROfit, Sketch, Photofit and EvoFIT composite construction techniques was carried out in a ‘‘forensically friendly format’’: composites of unfamiliar targets were constructed from memory following a 3-4 hour delay using a Cognitive Interview and experienced operators. The main dependent variable was spontaneous naming and overall performance was low (10% average naming rate). E-FITs were named better than all techniques except PROfit, though E-FIT was superior to PROfit when the target was
more distinctive. E-FIT, PROfit and Sketch were similar overall in a composite sorting task, but Sketch emerged best for more average-looking targets. Photofit performed poorly, as did EvoFIT, an experimental system. Overall, facial distinctiveness was found to be an important factor for composite naming.


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