Using similarity judgments to conduct a mugshot album search |
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Authors: | A. M. Levi N. Jungman A. Ginton A. Aperman Gavriel Noble |
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Affiliation: | 1. Division of Identification and Forensic Science, Israel Police Headquarters, 91906, Jerusalem, Israel
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Abstract: | Mugshot searches fail because the witness must be shown too many photos. Current methods to reduce the number rely too heavily on verbal reports of individual features. This research reports three tests of a new system that augments the presently used tools by having the witness choose photos that are subjectively similar to the target. Each photo thus chosen increases the ranking of every photo in the album that is similar to it, as determined by a similarity network in which the album photos are embedded. Because the ranking of the target itself is usually thus increased, it is soon displayed. The tests used familiar targets, an incidental one, and unfamiliar videoed ones. From 76% to 84% of the “witnesses” reached the target, having viewed 2.4 to 8.5 times fewer photos than they would have had they simply leafed through photos as is traditionally done. |
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