How can we catch more bad guys and fewer innocent people? Spoiler: not through an Internet community of cat lovers.

By Noa Leach

Published: Monday, 20 November 2023 at 09:22 AM


If you’re into true crime, you’ll know how often the wrong person is selected in a police line-up. Well, a group of psychologists argue it’s because current police line-up procedures don’t help witnesses choose from suspects effectively – but new AI technology could better jog their memories.

Unlike in Hollywood movies, current police line-ups usually don’t have a victim choose from a group of suspects paraded around a physical room. Instead, a victim only views static photos of them, which offers a limited view of possible culprits.

A new interactive system developed by researchers at the University of Birmingham wants to change this. Using 3D models, a perpetrator can be viewed from multiple angles – including the one the victim first saw them at.

The results? The researchers found that interactive viewing improves the accuracy of witness selection by 42 per cent. Even compared to video line-ups – when the suspects are filmed turning – the technology improved selection accuracy by 20 per cent.

“We need to do better to increase the odds that guilty people are identified while decreasing the odds that innocent people are selected from line-ups,” Prof Heather Flowe, who has been working on this project for over nine years, tells BBC Science Focus.

Existing line-up methods that police forces in the UK and USA use are ineffective and cause errors, says Flowe. In America, the suspects’ photos do not even have to be consistent – ranging from driver’s license photos to people in prison uniforms. “So you have this hodge-podge line-up,” Flowe says. “It’s just not fair.”

These line-ups are missing tricks to help jog memories, she says – tricks which Flowe and her team are investigating. While her current technology allows witnesses to interact with the suspects’ images, the team are testing ways to include dynamic facial movements, emotional expression, changes in lighting, and accessories such as masks using AI.

The ethos behind Flowe’s research is that the more of these you can provide a witness, the more accurate their choice will be.

But for now, Flowe is focusing on getting the interactive line-up technology rolled out. Her team is in discussion with the US and UK police forces before it starts being tested in the field.

“It’s a good opportunity for police to get on board and start using better tech, which really hasn’t changed in 100 years – we’re still using just photographs when we could do so much better,” Flowe says.