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Dalton, Gary; Milne, Rebecca; Hope, Lorraine; Vernham, Zarah; Nunan, Jordan – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Person descriptions often lack the level of detail necessary to assist in the apprehension of a perpetrator. To date, it is not clear how person descriptions are obtained by frontline police officers. Worldwide, many police forces now use body worn video (BWV), which provides a unique opportunity to examine how frontline police officers gather…
Descriptors: Police, Video Technology, Questioning Techniques, Recall (Psychology)
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Fysh, Matthew C.; Bindemann, Markus – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
When comparing images of faces in criminal investigations, forensic facial examiners report key features such as moles to be particularly diagnostic of identity. However, scientific evidence for the efficacy of moles in facial identification is still limited. The current study systematically examined the effect of moles on facial image comparison…
Descriptors: Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Identification, Decision Making
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Bagnis, Arianna; Cremonini, Valeria; Pasi, Eleonora; Pasquinelli, Gianandrea; Rubbi, Ivan; Russo, Paolo Maria; Mattarozzi, Katia – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Associations between facial appearance and hiring decisions are well-documented within job literature as a source of decision misjudgment with economic and human costs. Notwithstanding, this aspect is yet to be investigated in healthcare. We collected 90 pictures of new-graduates nurses faces to be judged on different facial appearance-based…
Descriptors: Bias, Health Services, Familiarity, Personnel Selection
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Jones, Alyssa R.; Carlson, Curt A.; Lockamyeir, Robert F.; Hemby, Jacob A.; Carlson, Maria A.; Wooten, Alex R. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Many crimes occur in which a perpetrator has a distinctive facial feature, such as a tattoo or black eye, but few eyewitness identification (ID) studies have involved such a feature. We conducted an experiment to determine how eyewitness ID performance is impacted by a distinctive facial feature, and how police could deal with this issue.…
Descriptors: Identification, Recall (Psychology), Physical Characteristics, Crime
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Robertson, David J.; Burton, A. Mike – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Matching unfamiliar faces is highly error-prone, and most studies highlight the implications for real-world ID-checking. Here we study a particular instance of ID-checking: proof of age for buying restricted goods such as alcohol. In this case, checkers must establish that an identity document is carried by its legitimate owner (i.e., that the ID…
Descriptors: Identification, Purchasing, Decision Making, Observation
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Bhardwaj, Kavya; Hole, Graham – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
We investigated how prior bias about a face's racial characteristics can affect its encoding and resultant facial composite construction. In total, 61 participants (24 Europeans, 18 Indians living in India and 19 Indians living in Europe) saw a racially ambiguous unfamiliar face and were led to believe it was either European or Indian. They…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Indians, Human Body, Race