14 results on '"Frowd, Charlie"'
Search Results
2. Parental reference photos do not always improve the accuracy of forensic age progressions
- Author
-
Provenzano, Andrew, Lampinen, James Michael, Erickson, William, Frowd, Charlie, Mahoney, Greg, Provenzano, Andrew, Lampinen, James Michael, Erickson, William, Frowd, Charlie, and Mahoney, Greg
- Abstract
During long-term missing children cases, forensic artists construct age-progressions to estimate the child’s current appearance. It is commonly believed that incorporating information about the child’s biological relatives is critical in accurately estimating the child’s current appearance. However, some evidence suggests that predicting appearance based on inheritance of features may be error prone. The present studies examine whether age-progressions constructed with the aid of a biological reference photos led to better recognition than those constructed without a biological reference. We also investigated whether there would be any variation depending on the age-range of the age-progressions. Eight professional forensic artists created age-progressions based upon photographs provided by each of our eight targets. Half of their age progressions with the aid of parental reference photos and half without parental reference photos. Furthermore, half were age-progressed across a longer age-range (5-20 years) and half covered a shorter age-range (12-20 years). In Experiment 1 similarity scores were higher over shorter age-ranges. Further, across longer age-ranges age-progressions created with the aid of a parental reference were lower than those without a reference. In Experiment 2 recognition performance was higher across shorter age-ranges. Additionally, across longer age-ranges age-progressions created with the aid of a parental reference were recognized worse than those without a reference. These results suggest that in long-term missing person cases, forensic artists may benefit from not relying on biological references. Finally, consistent with previous research (e.g. Lampinen et al., 2012) age-progressions provided no benefit over using outdated photographs.
- Published
- 2020
3. The advantage of low and medium attractiveness for facial composite production from modern forensic systems
- Author
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Richardson, B.H, Marsh, J.E, Bell, R, Fodarella, Cristina, Ellison, L.E, Frowd, Charlie, Richardson, B.H, Marsh, J.E, Bell, R, Fodarella, Cristina, Ellison, L.E, and Frowd, Charlie
- Abstract
Recognition following long delays is superior for highly attractive and highly unattractive faces (cf. medium-attractive faces). In the current work, we investigated participants’ ability to recreate from memory faces of low-, medium- and high physical attractiveness. In Experiment 1, participants constructed composites of familiar (celebrity) faces using the holistic EvoFIT system. When controlling for other variables that may influence face recognition (memorability, familiarity, likeability and age), correct naming and ratings of likeness were superior for composites of low attractiveness targets. Experiment 2 replicated this design using the feature based PRO-fit system, revealing superiority (by composite naming and ratings of likeness) for medium attractiveness. In Experiment 3, participants constructed composites of unfamiliar faces after a forensically-relevant delay of 1 day. Using ratings of likeness as a measure of composite effectiveness, these same effects were observed for EvoFIT and PRO-fit. The work demonstrates the importance of attractiveness for method of composite face construction.
- Published
- 2020
4. The advantage of low and medium attractiveness for facial composite production from modern forensic systems
- Author
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Richardson, Beth Helen, Marsh, John Everett, Bell, R, Fodarella, Cristina, Ellison, Lauren Elizabeth, Frowd, Charlie, Richardson, Beth Helen, Marsh, John Everett, Bell, R, Fodarella, Cristina, Ellison, Lauren Elizabeth, and Frowd, Charlie
- Abstract
Recognition following long delays is superior for highly attractive and highly unattractive faces (cf. medium-attractive faces). In the current work, we investigated participants’ ability to recreate from memory faces of low-, medium- and high physical attractiveness. In Experiment 1, participants constructed composites of familiar (celebrity) faces using the holistic EvoFIT system. When controlling for other variables that may influence face recognition (memorability, familiarity, likeability and age), correct naming and ratings of likeness were superior for composites of low attractiveness targets. Experiment 2 replicated this design using the feature based PRO-fit system, revealing superiority (by composite naming and ratings of likeness) for medium attractiveness. In Experiment 3, participants constructed composites of unfamiliar faces after a forensically-relevant delay of 1 day. Using ratings of likeness as a measure of composite effectiveness, these same effects were observed for EvoFIT and PRO-fit. The work demonstrates the importance of attractiveness for method of composite face construction.
- Published
- 2020
5. The benefit of context for facial composite construction
- Author
-
Skelton, Faye C, Frowd, Charlie D, and Speers, Kathryn E
- Subjects
BF Psychology ,Facial composites ,facial construction ,memory retrieval ,158 Applied psychology ,face recall - Abstract
Purpose - The aim of this study was to investigate whether the presence of a whole-face context during facial composite production facilitates construction of facial composite images.Design/Methodology - In Experiment 1, constructors viewed a celebrity face and then developed a facial composite using PRO-fit in one of two conditions: either the full-face was visible while facial features were selected, or only the feature currently being selected was visible. The composites were named by different participants. We then replicated the study using a more forensically-valid procedure: In Experiment 2 non-football fans viewed an image of a premiership footballer and 24 hours later constructed a composite of the face with a trained software operator. The resulting composites were named by football fans.Findings - In both studies we found that presence of the facial context promoted more identifiable facial composite images.Research limitations/implications – Though this study uses current software in an unconventional way, this was necessary to avoid error arising from between-system differences.Practical implications - Results confirm that composite software should have the whole-face context visible to witnesses throughout construction. Though some software systems do this, there remain others that present features in isolation and these findings show that these systems are unlikely to be optimal. Originality/value - This is the first study to demonstrate the importance of a full-face context for the construction of facial composite images. Results are valuable to police forces and developers of composite software.
- Published
- 2015
6. When age-progressed images are unreliable: The roles of external features and age range
- Author
-
Erickson, William Blake, Lampinen, James Michael, Frowd, Charlie, Mahoney, Gregory, Erickson, William Blake, Lampinen, James Michael, Frowd, Charlie, and Mahoney, Gregory
- Abstract
When children go missing for many years, investigators commission age-progressed images from forensic artists to depict an updated appearance. These images have anecdotal success, and systematic research has found they lead to accurate recognition rates comparable to outdated photos. The present study examines the reliability of age progressions of the same individuals created by different artists. Eight artists first generated age progressions of eight targets across three age ranges. Eighty-five participants then evaluated the similarity of these images against other images depicting the same targets progressed at the same age ranges, viewing either whole faces or faces with external features concealed. Similarities were highest over shorter age ranges and when external features were concealed. Implications drawn from theory and application are discussed.
- Published
- 2016
7. Configural and featural information in facial-composite images
- Author
-
Frowd, Charlie D., Jones, Sharrome, Fodarella, Cristina, Skelton, Faye, Fields, Steve, Williams, Anna, Marsh, John, Thorley, Rachel, Nelson, Laura, Greenwood, Leah, Date, Louisa, Kearley, Kevin, McIntyre, Alex H., Hancock, Peter J.B., Frowd, Charlie D., Jones, Sharrome, Fodarella, Cristina, Skelton, Faye, Fields, Steve, Williams, Anna, Marsh, John, Thorley, Rachel, Nelson, Laura, Greenwood, Leah, Date, Louisa, Kearley, Kevin, McIntyre, Alex H., and Hancock, Peter J.B.
- Abstract
Eyewitnesses are often invited to construct a facial composite, an image created of the person they saw commit a crime that is used by law enforcement to locate criminal suspects. In the current paper, the effectiveness of composite images was investigated from traditional feature systems (E-FIT and PRO-fit), where participants (face constructors) selected individual features to build the face, and a more recent holistic system (EvoFIT), where they ?evolved? a composite by repeatedly selecting from arrays of complete faces. Further participants attempted to name these composites when seen as an unaltered image, or when blurred, rotated, linearly stretched or converted to a photographic negative. All of the manipulations tested reduced correct naming of the composites overall except (i) for a low level of blur, for which naming improved for holistic composites but reduced for feature composites, and (ii) for 100% linear stretch, for which a substantial naming advantage was observed. Results also indicated that both featural (facial elements) and configural (feature spacing) information was useful for recognition in both types of composite system, but highly-detailed information was more accurate in the feature-based than the holistic method. The naming advantage of linear stretch was replicated using a forensically more-practical procedure with observers viewing an unaltered ?composite sideways. The work is valuable to police practitioners and designers of facial-composite systems.
- Published
- 2014
8. Configural and featural information in facial-composite images
- Author
-
Frowd, Charlie, Jones, Sharrome, Fodarella, Cristina, Skelton, Faye Collette, Fields, Steve, Williams, Anna, Marsh, John Everett, Thorley, Rachel, Nelson, Laura, Greenwood, Leah, Date, Louisa, Kearley, Kevin, McIntyre, Alex, Hancock, Peter J.B. Hancock, Frowd, Charlie, Jones, Sharrome, Fodarella, Cristina, Skelton, Faye Collette, Fields, Steve, Williams, Anna, Marsh, John Everett, Thorley, Rachel, Nelson, Laura, Greenwood, Leah, Date, Louisa, Kearley, Kevin, McIntyre, Alex, and Hancock, Peter J.B. Hancock
- Abstract
Eyewitnesses are often invited to construct a facial composite, an image created of the person they saw commit a crime that is used by law enforcement to locate criminal suspects. In the current paper, the effectiveness of composite images was investigated from traditional feature systems (E-FIT and PRO-fit), where participants (face constructors) selected individual features to build the face, and a more recent holistic system (EvoFIT), where they ‘evolved’ a composite by repeatedly selecting from arrays of complete faces. Further participants attempted to name these composites when seen as an unaltered image, or when blurred, rotated, linearly stretched or converted to a photographic negative. All of the manipulations tested reduced correct naming of the composites overall except (i) for a low level of blur, for which naming improved for holistic composites but reduced for feature composites, and (ii) for 100% linear stretch, for which a substantial naming advantage was observed. Results also indicated that both featural (facial elements) and configural (feature spacing) information was useful for recognition in both types of composite system, but highly-detailed information was more accurate in the feature-based than the holistic method. The naming advantage of linear stretch was replicated using a forensically more-practical procedure with observers viewing an unaltered ¬composite sideways. The work is valuable to police practitioners and designers of facial-composite systems.
- Published
- 2014
9. Whole-face procedures for recovering facial images from memory
- Author
-
Frowd, Charlie, Skelton, Faye Collette, Hepton, Gemma, Holden, Laura, Minahil, Simra, Pitchford, Melanie, McIntyre, Alex, Brown, Charity, Hancock, Peter J B, Frowd, Charlie, Skelton, Faye Collette, Hepton, Gemma, Holden, Laura, Minahil, Simra, Pitchford, Melanie, McIntyre, Alex, Brown, Charity, and Hancock, Peter J B
- Abstract
Research has indicated that traditional methods for accessing facial memories usually yield unidentifiable images. Recent research, however, has made important improvements in this area to the witness interview, method used for constructing the face and recognition of finished composites. Here, we investigated whether three of these improvements would produce even-more recognisable images when used in conjunction with each other. The techniques are holistic in nature: they involve processes which operate on an entire face. Forty participants first inspected an unfamiliar target face. Nominally 24 h later, they were interviewed using a standard type of cognitive interview (CI) to recall the appearance of the target, or an enhanced ‘holistic’ interview where the CI was followed by procedures for focussing on the target's character. Participants then constructed a composite using EvoFIT, a recognition-type system that requires repeatedly selecting items from face arrays, with ‘breeding’, to ‘evolve’ a composite. They either saw faces in these arrays with blurred external features, or an enhanced method where these faces were presented with masked external features. Then, further participants attempted to name the composites, first by looking at the face front-on, the normal method, and then for a second time by looking at the face side-on, which research demonstrates facilitates recognition. All techniques improved correct naming on their own, but together promoted highly-recognisable composites with mean naming at 74% correct. The implication is that these techniques, if used together by practitioners, should substantially increase the detection of suspects using this forensic method of person identification.
- Published
- 2013
10. Varieties of biometric facial techniques for detecting offenders
- Author
-
Frowd, Charlie and Frowd, Charlie
- Abstract
Many crimes are committed where the only record of the event is in the memory of a witness or victim. Recovering a recognisable image of the offender’s face is then crucial for solving the crime. Traditionally, eyewitnesses describe the offender’s face and select individual facial features – eyes, hair, nose, etc. – to build a ‘composite’. This image is then published in the media so that someone can recognise it and phone the police with a name. Unfortunately, when tested using life-like procedures, this method rarely produces recognisable images. The current paper describes these systems for extracting such biometric information from witnesses. It also describes how useful they are and explores three such approaches for improving their effectiveness. Included are a new method to interview witnesses (a holistic-cognitive interview), a new method to present images to the public (animated composite) and a new system to construct the face (EvoFIT).
- Published
- 2010
11. Parental reference photos do not always improve the accuracy of forensic age progressions.
- Author
-
Provenzano AC, Lampinen JM, Erickson WB, Frowd C, and Mahoney G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Young Adult, Parents
- Abstract
During long-term missing children cases, forensic artists construct age-progressions to estimate the child's current appearance. It is commonly believed that incorporating information about the child's biological relatives is critical in accurately estimating the child's current appearance. However, some evidence suggests that predicting appearance based on inheritance of features may be error prone. The present studies examine whether age-progressions constructed with the aid of a biological reference photos led to better recognition than those constructed without a biological reference. We also investigated whether there would be any variation depending on the age-range of the age-progressions. Eight professional forensic artists created age-progressions based upon photographs provided by each of our eight targets. Half of their age progressions with the aid of parental reference photos and half without parental reference photos. Furthermore, half were age-progressed across a longer age-range (5-20 years) and half covered a shorter age-range (12-20 years). In Experiment 1 similarity scores were higher over shorter age-ranges. Further, across longer age-ranges age-progressions created with the aid of a parental reference were lower than those without a reference. In Experiment 2 recognition performance was higher across shorter age-ranges. Additionally, across longer age-ranges age-progressions created with the aid of a parental reference were recognized worse than those without a reference. These results suggest that in long-term missing person cases, forensic artists may benefit from not relying on biological references. Finally, consistent with previous research (e.g. Lampinen et al., 2012) age-progressions provided no benefit over using outdated photographs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 The Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. When age-progressed images are unreliable: The roles of external features and age range.
- Author
-
Erickson WB, Lampinen JM, Frowd CD, and Mahoney G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Forensic Sciences, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Aging, Face anatomy & histology, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Maxillofacial Development, Medical Illustration
- Abstract
When children go missing for many years, investigators commission age-progressed images from forensic artists to depict an updated appearance. These images have anecdotal success, and systematic research has found they lead to accurate recognition rates comparable to outdated photos. The present study examines the reliability of age progressions of the same individuals created by different artists. Eight artists first generated age progressions of eight targets across three age ranges. Eighty-five participants then evaluated the similarity of these images against other images depicting the same targets progressed at the same age ranges, viewing either whole faces or faces with external features concealed. Similarities were highest over shorter age ranges and when external features were concealed. Implications drawn from theory and application are discussed., (Copyright © 2016 The Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Configural and featural information in facial-composite images.
- Author
-
Frowd CD, Jones S, Fodarella C, Skelton F, Fields S, Williams A, Marsh JE, Thorley R, Nelson L, Greenwood L, Date L, Kearley K, McIntyre AH, and Hancock PJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Biometric Identification methods, Face anatomy & histology, Photography
- Abstract
Eyewitnesses are often invited to construct a facial composite, an image created of the person they saw commit a crime that is used by law enforcement to locate criminal suspects. In the current paper, the effectiveness of composite images was investigated from traditional feature systems (E-FIT and PRO-fit), where participants (face constructors) selected individual features to build the face, and a more recent holistic system (EvoFIT), where they 'evolved' a composite by repeatedly selecting from arrays of complete faces. Further participants attempted to name these composites when seen as an unaltered image, or when blurred, rotated, linearly stretched or converted to a photographic negative. All of the manipulations tested reduced correct naming of the composites overall except (i) for a low level of blur, for which naming improved for holistic composites but reduced for feature composites, and (ii) for 100% linear stretch, for which a substantial naming advantage was observed. Results also indicated that both featural (facial elements) and configural (feature spacing) information were useful for recognition in both types of composite system, but highly-detailed information was more accurate in the feature-based than in the holistic method. The naming advantage of linear stretch was replicated using a forensically more-practical procedure with observers viewing an unaltered composite sideways. The work is valuable to police practitioners and designers of facial-composite systems., (Copyright © 2013 Forensic Science Society. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Whole-face procedures for recovering facial images from memory.
- Author
-
Frowd CD, Skelton F, Hepton G, Holden L, Minahil S, Pitchford M, McIntyre A, Brown C, and Hancock PJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Forensic Sciences, Humans, Male, Software, Face, Mental Recall, Recognition, Psychology
- Abstract
Research has indicated that traditional methods for accessing facial memories usually yield unidentifiable images. Recent research, however, has made important improvements in this area to the witness interview, method used for constructing the face and recognition of finished composites. Here, we investigated whether three of these improvements would produce even-more recognisable images when used in conjunction with each other. The techniques are holistic in nature: they involve processes which operate on an entire face. Forty participants first inspected an unfamiliar target face. Nominally 24h later, they were interviewed using a standard type of cognitive interview (CI) to recall the appearance of the target, or an enhanced 'holistic' interview where the CI was followed by procedures for focussing on the target's character. Participants then constructed a composite using EvoFIT, a recognition-type system that requires repeatedly selecting items from face arrays, with 'breeding', to 'evolve' a composite. They either saw faces in these arrays with blurred external features, or an enhanced method where these faces were presented with masked external features. Then, further participants attempted to name the composites, first by looking at the face front-on, the normal method, and then for a second time by looking at the face side-on, which research demonstrates facilitates recognition. All techniques improved correct naming on their own, but together promoted highly-recognisable composites with mean naming at 74% correct. The implication is that these techniques, if used together by practitioners, should substantially increase the detection of suspects using this forensic method of person identification., (Copyright © 2013 Forensic Science Society. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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