Making faces with computers
Witness cognition and technology
Knowledge concerning the cognition involved in perceiving and remembering faces has informed the design of at least two generations of facial compositing technology. These systems allow a witness to work with a computer (and a police operator) in order to construct an image of a perpetrator. Research conducted with systems currently in use has suggested that basing the construction process on the witness recalling and verbally describing the face can be problematic. To overcome these problems and make better use of witness cognition, the latest systems use a combination of Principal Component Analysis (PCA) facial synthesis and an array-based interface. The present paper describes a preliminary study conducted to determine whether the use of an array-based interface really does make appropriate use of witness cognition and what issues need to be considered in the design of emerging compositing technology.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Pike, Graham E., Nicola A. Brace, Jim Turner, Hayley Ness & Annelies Vredeveldt
2019.
Advances in Facial Composite Technology, Utilizing Holistic Construction, Do Not Lead to an Increase in Eyewitness Misidentifications Compared to Older Feature-Based Systems.
Frontiers in Psychology 10
Frowd, Charlie D. & Peter J. B. Hancock
2008.
Evolving Human Faces. In
The Art of Artificial Evolution [
Natural Computing Series, ],
► pp. 189 ff.
Paine, Carina B., Graham E. Pike, Nicola A. Brace & Helen L. Westcott
2008.
Children making faces: the effect of age and prompts on children's facial composites of unfamiliar faces.
Applied Cognitive Psychology 22:4
► pp. 455 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 10 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.