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Feeling the future of eyewitness research

For decades, eyewitness memory research has had the worthy goal of minimizing the chances that an innocent suspect is falsely identified. However, this is not the only goal. Partial receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves provide a way to identify lineup procedures that keep the false alarm r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cognition 2024-10, Vol.251, p.105879, Article 105879
Main Authors: Wilson, Brent M., Seale-Carlisle, Travis M., Colloff, Melissa F.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:For decades, eyewitness memory research has had the worthy goal of minimizing the chances that an innocent suspect is falsely identified. However, this is not the only goal. Partial receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves provide a way to identify lineup procedures that keep the false alarm rate low while also maximizing the hit rate. Recently, there have been attempts to extend the ROC curve into high false alarm rate regions that fair lineups are intentionally designed to avoid. These new full ROCs could provide a way for the police to circumvent the protections offered by fillers in a fair lineup. Moreover, these attempts to extend the ROC curve are not based on a mathematically coherent model of latent diagnostic signals. In this article, we empirically demonstrate how this lack of a solid foundation can lead to dubious conclusions, such as eyewitnesses possessing precognition and being able to reliably identify the person they will see commit a crime in the future. •Partial ROC curves identify lineup procedures that maximize hit rates while keeping false alarm rates low.•New full ROC construction methods are at odds with the goal of protecting innocent suspects from misidentification.•Full ROC curves ordered by diagnosticity ratio are elevated by experimental noise, providing a biased discriminability measure.
ISSN:0010-0277
1873-7838
1873-7838
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105879