• Ephera@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    To my knowledge, it’s rather an interviewing skill than a drawing skill. The victim might not be able to name details, such as narrow, small eyes when they recount it themselves (nor if you gave them all of the design freedom of a 3D modeling software), but if you specifically ask them whether the eyes were big or small, wide or narrow, then they can often give an answer to that, with some amount of uncertainty. Gauging that uncertainty is also part of the interviewing skill.

    I also imagine a sketch where the uncertain details are left out is more helpful for actually finding the person than a highly detailed model where everything has to be modeled realistically, no matter how unsure you feel about it.

    • Nastybutler@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      That’s fair. However I’d like to see a study where subjects were shown a 5 second clip of a crime and half were sent to a police sketch artist, and the other half given that Tiger Woods game and see who comes up with a better depiction