Frowd, Charlie ORCID: 0000-0002-5082-1259, Portch, Emma, Estudillo, Alejandro J., Ford, Claire, Purcell, Amy, Pitchford, Melanie and Brown, Charity
(2025)
The Value of Whole‐Face Procedures for the Construction and Naming of Identifiable Likenesses for Recall‐Based Methods of Facial‐Composite Construction.
Applied Cognitive Psychology, 39
(4).
e70015.
ISSN 0888-4080
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/acp.70015
Abstract
Traditional methods of facial-composite construction rely on a witness recalling features of an offender’s face. We assess the value of (1) the addition of a trait-recall mnemonic to a Cognitive-type Interview, and (2) perceptually stretching presented composites, to aid image recognition. Participant-constructors intentionally or incidentally encoded a target face, were interviewed about its facial features 3-4 hours or 2 days later, made a series of trait attributions (or not) about the face and constructed a feature-based composite. Regardless of encoding manipulation, faces constructed after 3-4 hours were twice as likely to be correctly named (cf. after two days) both when the trait-recall mnemonic was applied and composites were viewed stretched. Thus, the research indicates that benefit should be afforded when trait-recall mnemonics are employed for feature composites constructed on the same day as the crime, and composites are presented to potential recognisers with an instruction to view the face side-on.
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