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Cascading Bias of Initial Exposure to Information at the Crime Scene to the Subsequent Evaluation of Skeletal Remains,
Authors:Sherry Nakhaeizadeh M.Res.  Ruth M. Morgan D.Phil.  Carolyn Rando Ph.D.  Itiel E. Dror Ph.D.
Affiliation:1. Department of Security and Crime Science, University College London, London, UK;2. Centre for the Forensic Sciences, University College London, London, UK;3. Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK;4. Cognitive Consultants International (CCI‐HQ), London, UK
Abstract:Thirty‐eight participants took part in a study that investigated the potential cascading effects of initial exposure to extraneous context upon subsequent decision‐making. Participants investigated a mock crime scene, which included the excavation of clandestine burials that had a male skeletal cast dressed either in female or gender neutral clothing. This was followed by a forensic anthropological assessment of the skeletal remains, with a control group assessing the same male skeletal cast without any clothing context. The results indicated that the sex assessment was highly dependent upon the context in which participants were exposed to prior to the analysis. This was especially noticeable in the female clothing context where only one participant determined the male skeletal cast to be male. The results demonstrate the importance of understanding the role of context in forensic anthropology at an early stage of an investigation and its potential cascading effect on subsequent assessments.
Keywords:forensic science  cognitive forensics  decision‐making  forensic anthropology  contextual information  crime scene  bias  human factors
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