The low prevalence effect in fingerprint comparison amongst forensic science trainees and novices

Author:

Growns BethanyORCID,Dunn James D.,Helm Rebecca K.,Towler Alice,Kukucka Jeff

Abstract

The low prevalence effect is a phenomenon whereby target prevalence affects performance in visual search (e.g., baggage screening) and comparison (e.g., fingerprint examination) tasks, such that people more often fail to detect infrequent target stimuli. For example, when exposed to higher base-rates of ‘matching’ (i.e., from the same person) than ‘non-matching’ (i.e., from different people) fingerprint pairs, people more often misjudge ‘non-matching’ pairs as ‘matches’–an error that can falsely implicate an innocent person for a crime they did not commit. In this paper, we investigated whether forensic science training may mitigate the low prevalence effect in fingerprint comparison. Forensic science trainees (n = 111) and untrained novices (n = 114) judged 100 fingerprint pairs as ‘matches’ or ‘non-matches’ where the matching pair occurrence was either high (90%) or equal (50%). Some participants were also asked to use a novel feature-comparison strategy as a potential attenuation technique for the low prevalence effect. Regardless of strategy, both trainees and novices were susceptible to the effect, such that they more often misjudged non-matching pairs as matches when non-matches were rare. These results support the robust nature of the low prevalence effect in visual comparison and have important applied implications for forensic decision-making in the criminal justice system.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

UK Research and Innovation Policy Support Fund at the University of Exeter

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Cited by 4 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. A guide to measuring expert performance in forensic pattern matching;Behavior Research Methods;2024-03-14

2. Forensic Science Decision-Making;The Cambridge Handbook of Psychology and Legal Decision-Making;2024-02-29

3. High target prevalence may reduce the spread of attention during search tasks;Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics;2023-11-30

4. Interpol review of fingermarks and other body impressions (2019 – 2022);Forensic Science International: Synergy;2023

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