Earwitness testimony from lay listeners can provide vital evidence in a criminal investigation. However, some research suggests that voice descriptions can be vague. This paper presents the findings of three experiments investigating lay-listener voice descriptions, with a view to developing a procedure for eliciting accurate and admissible earwitness testimony. Experiment 1 examined free voice descriptions provided by native English-speaking lay listeners (N=20). As predicted, lay-listeners frequently used vague, or subjective voice descriptions. Phonetic features were inconsistently described across voices, possibly related to a lack of confidence in describing (or perceiving) the same phonetic feature across different voices. Experimen...
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Forensic voice discrimination by la...
Nonverbal cues that occur during trial testimony have been shown to make a difference in juror ratin...
Voice recognition plays an important role in human communication and there is increasing interest in...
When a crime has occurred, witness statements are taken. Witnesses, in particular earwitnesses, howe...
Many crimes are committed under conditions of darkness, by masked perpetrators or over a phone. In s...
Most students are familiar with eyewitness testimony, but earwitness testimony might be valuable too...
open access articleHistorically, there has been less research carried out on earwitness than eyewitn...
This study addressed the effect of misleading post-event information (PEI) on voice ratings, identif...
Unfamiliar voice identification is error-prone. Whilst the investigation of system variables may ind...
Individual voice and speech characteristics are important for earwitness identification. A target-ab...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
We examined how voice lineup identification may be influenced by verbalizing the presented voice, a ...
In forensic settings, lay (non‐expert) listeners may be required to compare voice samples for identi...
Contains fulltext : 54671.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)An experiment ...
According to Tulving and Thomson (1973), similarity in encoding and recall contexts will facilitate ...
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Forensic voice discrimination by la...
Nonverbal cues that occur during trial testimony have been shown to make a difference in juror ratin...
Voice recognition plays an important role in human communication and there is increasing interest in...
When a crime has occurred, witness statements are taken. Witnesses, in particular earwitnesses, howe...
Many crimes are committed under conditions of darkness, by masked perpetrators or over a phone. In s...
Most students are familiar with eyewitness testimony, but earwitness testimony might be valuable too...
open access articleHistorically, there has been less research carried out on earwitness than eyewitn...
This study addressed the effect of misleading post-event information (PEI) on voice ratings, identif...
Unfamiliar voice identification is error-prone. Whilst the investigation of system variables may ind...
Individual voice and speech characteristics are important for earwitness identification. A target-ab...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
We examined how voice lineup identification may be influenced by verbalizing the presented voice, a ...
In forensic settings, lay (non‐expert) listeners may be required to compare voice samples for identi...
Contains fulltext : 54671.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)An experiment ...
According to Tulving and Thomson (1973), similarity in encoding and recall contexts will facilitate ...
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Forensic voice discrimination by la...
Nonverbal cues that occur during trial testimony have been shown to make a difference in juror ratin...
Voice recognition plays an important role in human communication and there is increasing interest in...