Perceptual Expertise of Forensic Examiners and Reviewers on Tests of Cross-Race and Disguised Face Identification and Face Memory.

Amy N Yates, Jacqueline G Cavazos, G��raldine Jeckeln, Ying Hu, Eilidh Noyes, Carina A Hahn, Alice J O'Toole, P Jonathon Phillips
Author Information
  1. Amy N Yates: National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg Maryland USA.
  2. Jacqueline G Cavazos: University of California, Irvine Irvine California USA. ORCID
  3. G��raldine Jeckeln: The University of Texas at Dallas Richardson Texas USA. ORCID
  4. Ying Hu: State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China.
  5. Eilidh Noyes: School of Psychology University of Leeds Leeds UK. ORCID
  6. Carina A Hahn: National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg Maryland USA. ORCID
  7. Alice J O'Toole: The University of Texas at Dallas Richardson Texas USA.
  8. P Jonathon Phillips: National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg Maryland USA. ORCID

Abstract

Forensic facial professionals have been shown in previous studies to identify people from frontal face images more accurately than untrained participants when given 30���s per face pair. We tested whether this superiority holds in more challenging conditions. Two groups of forensic facial professionals (examiners, reviewers) and untrained participants were tested in three lab-based tasks: other-race face identification, disguised face identification, and face memory. For other-race face identification, on same-race faces, examiners were superior to controls; on different-race identification, examiners and controls performed comparably. Examiners were superior to controls for impersonation disguise, but not consistently superior for evasion disguise. Examiners' performance on the Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT+) was marginally better than reviewers and controls. We conclude that under laboratory-style conditions, professional examiners' identification superiority does not generalize completely to other-race and disguised faces. Future work should administer other-race and disguise face identification tests that allow forensic professionals to follow methods and procedures they typically use in casework.

Keywords

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