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Journal Article

Citation

Burris C, Edwards S. J. Crim. Psychol. 2017; 7(4): 280-286.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/JCP-03-2017-0013

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE

Based on the previously observed link between greater facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) and interpersonal aggression in men (see Haselhuhn et al., 2015), the purpose of this paper is to test whether fWHR could differentiate among male offenders as a function of the relative aggressiveness of the crime for which they had been convicted.

Design/methodology/approach

fWHR measurements (n=550) were computed based on a large subset of male offenders available on a public domain database. Each offender's index offense and possible confounding variables such as age, ethnicity, and body mass index were also recorded.

Findings

Multiple analyses yielded no evidence of a relationship between male fWHR and the comparative level of violence of their conviction offense.

Originality/value

Establishing an empirical basis for probable parameters of an unknown offender's facial structure could have a considerable practical value for criminal profiling purposes. fWHR - at least as it has been most frequently assessed - does not appear to be a facial parameter that is useful for this purpose, however.

Keywords:
Aggression, Violence, Profiling, Facial structure, Facial width-to-height ratio, Offender sample

Type:
Research paper

Publisher:
Emerald Publishing Limited


Language: en

Keywords

Aggression; Facial structure; Facial width-to-height ratio; Offender sample; Profiling; Violence

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