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Journal Article

Citation

Wogalter MS, Marwitz DB, Leonard DC. Appl. Cogn. Psychol. 1992; 6(5): 443-453.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1992, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/acp.2350060508

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The present research examined whether line-ups based on target ('suspect') face similarity are biased or suggestive. Four experiments are described in which subjects constructed photographic line-ups by selecting foils similar in appearance to a target. Later, another group of subjects who had not seen the faces before (mock witnesses) were asked to pick out the targets from the line-ups. All four experiments showed that mock witnesses selected the target significantly more often than expected by chance, thereby demonstrating suggestiveness. Three alternative line-up construction methods were also evaluated. In these methods, foil selection was based not only on target similarity but also on similarity with one or more of the other line-up faces. Results showed that alternative line-up targets were not selected significantly more often than chance, suggesting that bias was reduced. An overall analysis showed that the alternative line-ups were significantly less suggestive than target-based line-ups. The results indicate that foil selection procedures that incorporate foil-to-foil similarity produce fairer line-ups than those exclusively based on target similarity.


Language: en

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