Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Witness Experiment

The purpose of this experiment was to determine if you would make a good witness at a crime scene.


For this exercise, we cut pictures of people's faces (similarly sized) out of various magazines. After we obtained the faces, we cut them up into individual facial features, such as the nose, eyes, mouth, and hair. Then, all of the same features were put into put into piles and your partner made a new face by picking one feature from each pile. One a new face was created, we were given 10 seconds to memorize it before each feature was put back into its pile. We had to then try to re-create the face our partner made.

In conclusion, this exercise was used to determine if you would be a good eye-witness based on your ability to memorize the distinct characteristics of a person's facial features.

I think I have a pretty good memory and would make a great eye-witness because I did really well in this experiment; I easily re-created the faces my partner made.

3 comments:

  1. I really like the organization of your information on this post because the conclusion is after the picture and it chronologically makes perfect sense. I also like how you rerflected on the activity because it shows your growth.

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  2. You present the information in a very to-the-point, concise matter that is easy to ready and take in. Your formatting is very neat. :)

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  3. I agree with Charlotte, your post is very well organized. I like how much detail you included. Good job!

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