Book Read Free

Handbook of Psychology of Investigative Interviewing: Current Developments and Future Directions

Page 48

by Ray Bull, Tim Valentine, Dr Tom Williamson


  bination of the two techniques used in the PDI is evaluated both in the labo-

  ratory and in the fi eld, before any recommendation that the PDI should be

  used by the police. First, we examined the effect of the PDI protocol on com-

  pleteness and accuracy of person description produced in the laboratory, in

  comparison to a control interview made up of two successive standard instruc-

  tions and recall. This control interview began with a standard instruction

  ( ‘ Please describe the person you saw in as much detail as possible ’ ). After this

  fi rst description, the experimenter told the participant to describe he same

  target person again with the same standard instruction ( ‘ Now, describe the

  same person again in as much detail as possible ’ ). Forty participants (all uni-

  versity students) were randomly assigned to one of two conditions, and were

  tested individually. They were shown a video of a target person performing

  routine activities. For external validity, we used 20 videos (same actions, scene,

  settings and view) with a different actor in each. No information about the

  aim of the experiment was given (incidental encoding). After watching the

  A Method to Enhance Person Description

  249

  video, participants were given a 5 - minute fi ller task and subsequently admin-

  istered one of the two protocols.

  Each interview was audio - taped and transcribed. All the descriptors reported

  by participants for the same target person were listed and distributed into

  several categories (facial elements, general components, clothes and subjec-

  tive/attitudinal/behavioural details). Subjective details are those that refer to

  ambiguous qualities of face shape or personality/occupational impressions

  (Meissner et al ., 2001 ). Twenty students independently coded all the descrip-

  tive details recalled as either correct or incorrect.

  Results showed that the descriptions obtained by the PDI contained sig-

  nifi cantly more correct information about general features ( M = 4.00), facial

  features ( M = 9.25), clothing ( M = 5.15) and subjective/attitudinal/behav-

  ioural information ( M = 2.45) than those obtained by the control interview

  (respectively M = 2.60, M = 3.50, M = 3.10 and M = 2.45), without an

  accompanying increase in errors, except for facial components (respectively

  M = 4.25 and M = 2.45 for PDI and control interview).

  Ultimately, the PDI yielded more complete descriptions in comparison to

  a control interview. Nevertheless, before this method is employed in the fi eld,

  it must be tested in collaboration with police offi cers because each professional,

  in their everyday job, could have some damaging practice which may decrease

  the effi ciency of a new tool. There are also some informal institutional matters

  which are very diffi cult to detect in laboratory.

  In our second experiment, we examined the effect of both the PDI protocol

  and the standard French police interview for person description (SFPIPD) on

  completeness and accuracy of person description produced in the fi eld. When

  the SFPIPD is used, police offi cers usually begin with an open - ended instruc-

  tion ( ‘ Give me all the details you can about the criminal ’ ), and carry on with

  many questions about physical traits unreported by the witness or the victim.

  The main procedural difference from the previous experiment was that all

  the interviews were conducted by police offi cers experienced and specializing

  in criminal investigation. All the interviews took place at a police station, in a

  police offi cer ’ s offi ce. Police offi cers were trained in the PDI protocol by an

  experimenter for approximately 20 minutes.

  Twenty - eight university students were randomly assigned and were tested

  individually. They were shown one of the same videos as before. No informa-

  tion about the aim of the experiment was given. Consequently, they were not

  warned that their memory would be tested. After a 5 - minute fi ller task, an

  experimenter told the participant that, if they agreed to take part, the next

  part of the study would take place in a police station. If the participant refused,

  their participation in the study ended. If they accepted, then the experimenter

  drove the participant to the police station. Immediately, a police offi cer would

  come and instruct the participant to accompany him to his offi ce. Then, the

  interview would begin.

  Results showed that the descriptions obtained by the PDI contained sig-

  nifi cantly more correct information about general features ( M = 5.93), facial

  250

  Handbook of Psychology of Investigative Interviewing

  components ( M = 9.43) and subjective information ( M = 3.29) than those

  obtained by the SFPIPD (respectively M = 3.50, M = 2.07, and M = 1.07),

  without an accompanying increase in errors. The accuracy for these particular

  elements was signifi cantly higher for the PDI than for the SFPIPD, respectively

  90% and 71% for general features, 82% and 41% for facial components, and

  96% and 56% for subjective elements. However, we did not observe any quali-

  tative or quantitative difference between clothing descriptors reported by PDI

  or SFPIPD. Considering the total number of descriptors, we observed that

  the PDI obtained a 135% increase of correct information (respectively M = 9.14

  and M = 21.50 for SFPIPD and PDI), with a 34% decrease in errors (respec-

  tively M = 7.57 and M = 5.00 for SFPIPD and PDI), and these signifi cant

  differences led to more accurate descriptions (respectively 56% and 82% for

  SFPIPD and PDI).

  Other results of interest to police offi cers concerned the proportion of wit-

  nesses whose description included each type of descriptor, which was equal to

  or higher for PDI compared to the SFPIPD (see Table 14.4 ). The PDI descrip-

  tions more frequently included ethnicity, forehead, chin, subjective informa-

  tion or face shape descriptors than those obtained by means of a SFPIPD.

  More important for the effectiveness of the investigative process is the signifi -

  cantly higher accuracy rate obtained with the PDI, particularly concerning

  Table 14.4: Occurrence and accuracy of descriptors

  Descriptors

  Occurrence (%)

  Accuracy (%)

  SFPIPD

  PDI

  SFPIPD

  PDI

  Gender

  100

  100

  100

  100

  Height

  100

  100

  44

  80 *

  Age

  93

  100

  41

  81 *

  Ethnicity

  79

  100 *

  91

  93

  Build

  71

  93

  82

  94

  Hair color

  100

  93

  61

  76

  Hair length

  100

  100

  35

  75 *

  Forehead

  0

  29 *

  –

  67

  Eyes

  100

  100

  40

  55

  Nose


  43

  93 *

  17

  81 *

  Mouth

  43

  100 *

  17

  93 *

  Chin

  0

  79 *

  –

  86

  Face shape

  21

  57 *

  25

  77 *

  Other descriptors a

  29

  64 *

  75

  93

  Notes

  ‘ – ’ = unavailable or incalculable data.

  a. Ears, attitudes, etc.

  * Signifi cant difference at p < 0.05.

  SFPIPD = standard French police interview for person description; PDI = person description

  interview.

  A Method to Enhance Person Description

  251

  height or age, hair length, nose, mouth and face shape. Height and age are

  important descriptors used for a mug shot search, while the other descriptors

  are highly relevant for the construction of a facial composite.

  Thus, police offi cers, when using the PDI, obtained more complete and

  more accurate descriptions of a target person than with their standard protocol

  interview. The superiority of the PDI is specifi cally prevalent in the most useful

  descriptive element categories, namely general features, facial descriptors (ideal

  for a mugshot search) and personality traits. For these categories, the SFPIPD

  not only provided fewer correct elements, but resulted in numerous errors.

  There is a potential explanation for this lower accuracy rate. The performance

  of police offi cers in this study resulted in completeness of the descriptions that

  were largely and signifi cantly greater than those observed in archival study

  (Demarchi, 2003 ). There is a general ethos of evaluation in their everyday

  practice and they would have wanted to show that their standard protocols

  were effective ones. However, because they did not have any methods to

  increase the completeness of recalls, they must have used numerous closed

  questions which led to a decrease in the quality of the information reported

  (Stern,

  1902 ; Borst,

  1904 ; Whipple,

  1909, 1913

  ; Cady,

  1924 ; Goulding,

  1971 ; Dent & Stephenson, 1979 ).

  The poorer performance obtained with the standard methods does not

  imply necessarily that the descriptions provided are less useful than those

  obtained with a PDI. For police offi cers, an effi cient method must not only

  improve completeness and quality of perpetrators

  ’ descriptions, but also

  increase suspect detection and identifi cation. As a result, there is a need to

  evaluate the effi ciency of both the PDI and the SFPIPD in their relative ability

  to detect the target person. So we asked 60 participants to match target

  persons and their corresponding descriptions among a sample group of similar

  people (see Christie & Ellis, 1981 , for a similar experimental procedure). The

  material consisted of descriptions obtained in the second experiment, and a

  set of 33 photographs of similar individuals (matched for sex, age, height,

  ethnicity, build, hair), which included the 20 target persons. Participants were

  provided with seven descriptions obtained from only one type of interview

  (SFPIPD or PDI), and their task was to pair all the descriptions with the cor-

  responding people from the panel of photographs. Results showed that descrip-

  tions provided by the PDI led to a 50% increase in correct matches in comparison

  to SFPIPD. Nevertheless, the absolute matching rate (i.e., total number of

  correct matches divided by total number of matches) was low (0.12 for the

  FSPIPD and 0.18 to for the PDI).

  To explain the superiority of the PDI in this detection task, we investigated

  the signifi cant links between completeness, accuracy and correct matches. If

  PDI increases the detection frequency of a previously described person, it is

  fi rst and foremost because it leads to more complete recall whilst keeping

  constant the overall quality. If the opposite phenomenon is observed with the

  SFPIPD, it is because this method decreases the recall accuracy as soon as the

  number of reported descriptors increases.

  252

  Handbook of Psychology of Investigative Interviewing

  Conclusions and f uture d irections

  By using adapted instructions based on an analysis of spontaneous cognitive

  processes, with just 20 minutes ’ training, police offi cers can obtain descriptions

  which contain twice as many correct descriptors and half the number of errors

  than a standard police interview. These fi ndings are in contrast to previous

  studies, which found that encouraging people to generate more complete

  descriptions, particularly facial descriptions, resulted in a greater proportion

  of inaccurate details. These quantitative and qualitative improvements are

  immediately translated into an improved ability to identify a potential suspect.

  From a research point of view, this fi nding showed that the effi ciency of

  a physical description should not be measured only in terms of qualitative

  and quantitative aspects, but also through more concrete and ecological

  measures, such as the calculation of a matching score between the target

  person and its corresponding description among a defi nite population of

  similar individuals.

  More important for professionals is the ease of learning and using the PDI

  protocol. The PDI training in France lasts approximately 20 minutes as in our

  second study: 15 minutes for theoretical and empirical concepts and 5 minutes

  of attempts to obtain correct recitation of the two instructions. In France, the

  PDI training is now incorporated into standard and CI training for experienced

  police offi cers. However, the PDI is not yet taught to novice police offi cers or

  investigators.

  Police offi cers can use the PDI protocol in isolation or to augment a stan-

  dard or a cognitive interview. Preliminary research suggests that when a CI

  framework is used, the best time to give the witness the PDI instructions is

  after the last witness ’ s free recall which follows the ‘ change perspective ’ instruc-

  tion, and before the questioning phase. This order appears to produce the

  most effective performance. Further research will address this issue.

  Some issues that have implications for professionals need to be further

  explored. First, the impact of delay on completeness and accuracy of descrip-

  tions obtained by the PDI needs to be explored. Second, the ability of particu-

  lar sub - populations (e.g. children, older people, learning disabled) to produce

  better descriptions with aid of the PDI should be investigated. Third, research-

  ers must also investigate the possible interaction of the PDI with some poten-

  tial adverse factors affecting person description, for example the

  verbal

  overshadowing effect (VOE; Schooler

  & Engstler

  - Schooler,

  1990 ; Meissner

  et al ., 2001 ). The VOE is defi ned as impairment in recognition performance

  when people are required to provide a verbal description of a complex stimulus,

  such as the fac
e of a perpetrator. Finger & Pezdek (1999) showed that the

  VOE does not appear if there is a suffi cient delay (about 24 minutes) between

  description and recognition from line

  - ups or a photographs. Nevertheless,

  identifi cation from a line - up can only be used after a suspect has been appre-

  hended. Witnesses usually do not know the criminal and the investigation

  A Method to Enhance Person Description

  253

  often includes an examination of mugshots. The latter would be selected from

  available databases using the description given by the witness. According to

  the French police investigative procedure, police must ask witnesses for a

  detailed description of a perpetrator and immediately present them with an

  album of photographs of suspects known to have committed a crime in the

  local area and whose descriptions fi t the witness ’ s account. Whether verbal

  overshadowing will occur when such procedures are used remains to be estab-

  lished. Demarchi, Py, Parain & Groud - Tan (2006) found that recognition

  performance from a mugshot search following a PDI or a SFPIPD was similar

  to the performance of a control group who did not describe the face prior to

  viewing the mugshots.

  In conclusion, the PDI protocol, which allows the witness to recall pertin-

  ent information by using relevant instructions, promotes the completeness

  of a description of a person in the absence of social pressure or suggestive

  prompts for unrecalled information. Such a technique elicits more accu-

  rate descriptors and reduces the likelihood of contaminating subsequent

  attempts at verbal recall and perceptual identifi cation from a line

  - up or a

  mugshot fi le.

  References

  Boon , J. C. W. & Noon , E. ( 1994 ). Changing perspectives in cognitive interviewing .

  Psychology, Crime, and Law , 1 , 59 – 69 .

  Borst ,

  M. (

  1904 ).

  Recherches exp

  é rimentales sur l

  ’ é ducabilit é et la fi d é lit é du

  t é moignage [Researches on educability and reliability of testimonies] . Archives de

  Psychologie , III.

  Bower , G. H. & Karlin , B. M. ( 1974 ). Depth of processing, pictures of faces and

  recognition memory . Journal of Experimental Psychology , 103 , 751 – 757 .

  Brown , C. & Lloyd - Jones , T. J. ( 2003 ). Verbal overshadowing of multiple face and

  car recognition: Effects of within

  - versus across

 

‹ Prev