Do Masked-Face Lineups Facilitate Eyewitness Identification of a Masked Individual?

Perpetrators often wear disguises like ski masks to hinder subsequent identification by witnesses or law enforcement officials. In criminal cases involving a masked perpetrator, the decision of whether and how to administer a lineup often rests on the investigating officer. To date, no evidence-base...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. Applied 2019-09, Vol.25 (3), p.396-409
Hauptverfasser: Manley, Krista D, Chan, Jason C. K, Wells, Gary L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Perpetrators often wear disguises like ski masks to hinder subsequent identification by witnesses or law enforcement officials. In criminal cases involving a masked perpetrator, the decision of whether and how to administer a lineup often rests on the investigating officer. To date, no evidence-based recommendations are available for eyewitness identifications of a masked perpetrator. In 4 experiments, we examined lineup identification performance depending on variations in both encoding (studying a full face vs. a partial/masked face) and retrieval conditions (identifying a target from a full-face lineup vs. a partial/masked-face lineup). In addition, we manipulated whether the target was present or absent in the lineup in Experiments 3 and 4. Across all experiments, when participants had encoded a masked face, the masked-face lineup increased identification accuracy relative to the full-face lineup. These data provide preliminary evidence that matching lineup construction to how witnesses originally encoded the perpetrator may enhance the accuracy of eyewitness identifications. Public Significance Statement This study provides preliminary evidence that matching the facial appearance of lineup members to how witnesses originally encoded the perpetrator may enhance eyewitness accuracy. Additionally, it shows that witnesses are faster to respond and more confident in target identifications when the lineup matches encoding compared with when it does not.
ISSN:1076-898X
1939-2192
DOI:10.1037/xap0000195