- User profile
- stahld
- Joined
- March 1, 2008
Contact stahld (log-in required)
Items submitted by stahld
- Photos
- Videos
- Stories/Blogs
stahld has not submitted any photos to Las Vegas Sun
stahld has not submitted any videos to Las Vegas Sun
stahld has not submitted any stories to Las Vegas Sun
Most Popular
- Viewed
- Discussed
- E-mailed
- UNLV can move forward without the burden of losing streak to San Diego State
- A wife’s wisdom shows birth control issue needn’t be divisive
- Motorcycle accident claims life of man in northeast valley
- Surprise links, negotiated deals addressed by commissioners
- Hope and change and … what’s missing?
- We don’t need a CEO in charge
- New York mayor has the right idea
- Paying our own way
- Country has ‘given’ citizens a lot
- Jerry Tarkanian: Mike Moser impresses yet again on a day to remember former Rebel greats
Blogs
The Kats Report
Color from scene at Thomas & Mack: We have a wire job! Rebels win, and Louie Armstrong sings!
South Point owner Michael Gaughan's take on 'Vegas Stripped': 'I'll give it an 8' (4 Comments)
Author relishes writing the life story of ‘larger-than-life’ Oscar Goodman (3 Comments)
Elsewhere
Landowner: All roads could lead to Uxbridge casino
Revel reveals smoke-free casino opening
Cirque du Soleil show in Sands China casino to close this month
Meet the woman behind Sheldon Adelson
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.



I was glad to see that all of the misguided assertions in the first few paragraphs of the article at least had a purpose, which apparently is the sales of a product. There are a number of flaws readily apparent to the experienced forensic artist here. The most glaring one is that the system or its operator select faces and ask the witness to choose from among them rather than asking the witness to describe something that is already in their memory. I would think that it might force a witness into settling for something that is close, rather than constructing an image that is accurate. The "academics" who conducted this study may have found it relatively easy to have their participants achieve a likeness of a celebrity whose face is frequently seen in the media, but perhaps they should have made the attempt to achieve the same results with a subject who is seen in a fleeting moment under a situation of stress. My years in law enforcement as an investigator have demonstrated that the two situations are entirely different.
I acknowledge that software such as this has some potential value if used by a person trained in the interview of witnesses or victims of crime, but to present it in this manner is irresponsible. I find the one-sidedness of the article disturbing, and I find the likeness they achieved, even of these well known faces, to be of little value. Perhaps you should ask readers to guess at the identities of the composites or, as you call them, caricatures, without revealing the photos of the celebs.