» Articles » PMID: 32797306

Eye Spy a Liar: Assessing the Utility of Eye Fixations and Confidence Judgments for Detecting Concealed Recognition of Faces, Scenes and Objects

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 2020 Aug 16
PMID 32797306
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: In criminal investigations, uncooperative witnesses might deny knowing a perpetrator, the location of a murder scene or knowledge of a weapon. We sought to identify markers of recognition in eye fixations and confidence judgments whilst participants told the truth and lied about recognising faces (Experiment 1) and scenes and objects (Experiment 2) that varied in familiarity. To detect recognition we calculated effect size differences in markers of recognition between familiar and unfamiliar items that varied in familiarity (personally familiar, newly learned).

Results: In Experiment 1, recognition of personally familiar faces was reliably detected across multiple fixation markers (e.g. fewer fixations, fewer interest areas viewed, fewer return fixations) during honest and concealed recognition. In Experiment 2, recognition of personally familiar non-face items (scenes and objects) was detected solely by fewer fixations during honest and concealed recognition; differences in other fixation measures were not consistent. In both experiments, fewer fixations exposed concealed recognition of newly learned faces, scenes and objects, but the same pattern was not observed during honest recognition. Confidence ratings were higher for recognition of personally familiar faces than for unfamiliar faces.

Conclusions: Robust memories of personally familiar faces were detected in patterns of fixations and confidence ratings, irrespective of task demands required to conceal recognition. Crucially, we demonstrate that newly learned faces should not be used as a proxy for real-world familiarity, and that conclusions should not be generalised across different types of familiarity or stimulus class.

Citing Articles

Fixation durations on familiar items are longer due to attenuation of exploration.

Nahari T, Eldar E, Pertzov Y Cogn Res Princ Implic. 2024; 9(1):77.

PMID: 39543000 PMC: 11564497. DOI: 10.1186/s41235-024-00602-5.


A new theoretical perspective on concealed information detection.

Klein Selle N, Ben-Shakhar G Psychophysiology. 2022; 60(3):e14187.

PMID: 36166641 PMC: 10078248. DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14187.

References
1.
Georgiadou K, Chronos A, Verschuere B, Sauerland M . Reaction time-based Concealed Information Test in eyewitness identification is moderated by picture similarity but not eyewitness cooperation. Psychol Res. 2019; 86(7):2278-2288. PMC: 9470627. DOI: 10.1007/s00426-018-1139-8. View

2.
Renninger L, Verghese P, Coughlan J . Where to look next? Eye movements reduce local uncertainty. J Vis. 2007; 7(3):6. DOI: 10.1167/7.3.6. View

3.
Borji A, Parks D, Itti L . Complementary effects of gaze direction and early saliency in guiding fixations during free viewing. J Vis. 2014; 14(13):3. DOI: 10.1167/14.13.3. View

4.
Richler J, Mack M, Gauthier I, Palmeri T . Holistic processing of faces happens at a glance. Vision Res. 2009; 49(23):2856-61. PMC: 3732534. DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2009.08.025. View

5.
Peth J, Kim J, Gamer M . Fixations and eye-blinks allow for detecting concealed crime related memories. Int J Psychophysiol. 2013; 88(1):96-103. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2013.03.003. View