ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Science

A new experiment can help police catch criminals: Study

Washington D.C [USA], Aug 8 (ANI): A new test could help police to determine when criminals or witnesses are lying about their knowledge of a person's identity.

ANI Aug 08, 2019 18:16 IST googleads

Representative image

Washington D.C [USA], Aug 8 (ANI): A new test could help police to determine when criminals or witnesses are lying about their knowledge of a person's identity.
Researchers conducted a study to establish whether liars could hide their reaction when shown a photograph of a familiar face and found that they could not.
"Police officers routinely use photographs of faces to establish key identities in crimes. Some witnesses are honest, but many are hostile and intentionally conceal knowledge of known identities. For example, criminal networks - such as terrorist groups - might deny knowledge to protect one another, or a victim might be too afraid to identify their attacker," said Dr Ailsa Millen.
Dr Millen continued, "Our study tracked people's eye movements when they denied knowledge of someone they knew. Instead of looking for signs of lying directly, we looked for markers of recognition in patterns of eye fixations such as how individuals looked at a photograph of someone they recognised; compared to someone they did not."
The findings were published in the Journal Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications.
They used a process known as the Concealed Information Test (CIT), in which participants' eye movements are tracked while viewing photographs of familiar and unfamiliar faces on a computer screen. In each test, participants denied knowledge of one familiar identity while correctly rejecting genuinely unfamiliar faces, by pressing a button and saying 'no'.
"The main aim was to determine if liars could conceal recognition by following instructions to look at every familiar and unfamiliar face with the same sequence of eye fixations - in short, they could not," Dr Millen further added.
The team found that most liars could not fully conceal marks of face recognition either spontaneously, or during explicit strategies to look at every face with the same sequence of eye movements. Moreover, these explicit attempts uncovered more instances of concealment than spontaneous attempts to hide knowledge.
Dr Millen explained, "The harder that individuals tried to conceal knowledge, the more markers of recognition there were. These results suggest that it is difficult to conceal multiple markers of recognition at the same time."
The CIT is used in field practice in Japan to uncover guilty knowledge about a crime, which only the culprit would know, such as a murder weapon. However, little research has examined the process being used with faces. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Researchers find how HIV can lie dormant in brain

Researchers find how HIV can lie dormant in brain

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) inserts a copy of its DNA into human immune cells as a component of its life cycle. HIV latency is the term used to describe the long-lasting inert, latent condition that some of these newly infected immune cells might enter.

Read More
Science

Researchers imaged biological specimens with X-rays without damag

Researchers imaged biological specimens with X-rays without damag

A pollen particle revealing the nanofoam within, or a diatom with the various geometric features inside clearly visible: Using high-energy X-rays from DESY's PETRA III synchrotron light source, a team lead by CFEL scientists Saa Bajt and Henry Chapman was able to photograph these structures without destroying them.

Read More
Science

Fish recognizes itself in photographs: Research

Fish recognizes itself in photographs: Research

A research team led by specially appointed Professor Masanori Kohda of the Graduate School of Science at Osaka Metropolitan University has proved that fish assume "it's me" when they see themselves in a photograph. The researchers discovered that seeing their own face, rather than their own body, was the deciding factor.

Read More
Science

Hubble finds hungry black hole twisting captured star into donut

Hubble finds hungry black hole twisting captured star into donut

Black holes are gatherers, not hunters. They lie in wait until a hapless star wanders by. When the star gets close enough, the black hole's gravitational grasp violently rips it apart and sloppily devours its gasses while belching out intense radiation.

Read More
Science

Sponges can tell us about evolution of brain: Study

Sponges can tell us about evolution of brain: Study

Berlin [Germany], November 13 (ANI): The neurons in a brain communicate via synapses. These connections between cells lie at the heart of brain function and are regulated by several different genes. Sponges do not have these synapses, but their genome still encodes many of the synaptic genes. EMBL scientists undertook a study to answer why this might be the case.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.