The impact of forensic delay: facilitating facial composite construction using an early-recall retrieval technique

  • Emma Portch
  • , Charity Brown
  • , Cristina Fodarella
  • , Elizabeth Jackson
  • , Peter J. B. Hancock
  • , Colin G. Tredoux
  • , Chang Hong Liu
  • , Michael B. Lewis
  • , John E. Marsh
  • , William Blake Erikson
  • , Nick Mitchell
  • , Chiara Fasching
  • , Linda Tran
  • , Ellena Wood
  • , Elaine A. Damin
  • , Leonie Robertshaw
  • , James Michael Lampinen
  • , Louisa Date
  • , Spike Joyce
  • , Leonie Brooks
  • Ariell Farrow, Tom Barnes, Charlie D. Frowd

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Memory for facial features deteriorates over time, diminishing one’s ability to construct an accurate visual likeness of a face (i.e. a facial composite). In Experiment 1, we investigated how retention interval impacts composite construction. Participants recalled an unfamiliar face during a Cognitive Interview (CI) and constructed a feature composite across four post-encoding retention intervals. Correct composite naming declined sharply after a 3-4 hour retention interval, remained stable at two days, and dropped to floor-level after one week. Experiments 2–4 examined how composite effectiveness was influenced by the incorporation of two factors: (a) a novel, self-administered written face-recall attempt, conducted 3-4 hours after encoding, and (b) a standard or modified holistic recall elicited immediately before construction. Participant-witnesses created more identifiable likenesses when early recall was invited, suggesting that this intervention consolidated and enhanced access to facial-feature information. The addition of a character-based interview further improved both feature and holistic composites.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalErgonomics
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 8 Jul 2025

    Keywords

    • Facial composite
    • face memory
    • holistic interview
    • retention interval
    • self-administered interview

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