Lecturer in Cognitive Psychology, Edinburgh Napier University
Faye has taught cognitive and forensic psychology since 2004, and is currently a lecturer at Edinburgh Napier University. Her main research interests are applied aspects of memory and face recognition. As a lecturer and public speaker, she applies her research to cognitive, cultural and ethical aspects of the legal system. This include eyewitness testimony, suspect identification, police facial composites (‘E-FITs’), witness and suspect interviews, false confessions, false and recovered memories, and detection of deception.
Over the last decade, she has primarily worked on improving the recognition of facial composites of suspects using both feature-based and evolutionary software systems. She also leads Edinburgh Napier University’s MSc in Applied Criminology & Forensic Psychology.
Faye presents to both the Edinburgh and Glasgow Skeptics Societies, and performs at the Edinburgh Fringe as part of ‘Cabaret of Dangerous Ideas’.
Suspects confess to crimes they didn't commit – here's why
Aug 16, 2018 20:09 pm UTC| Insights & Views Law
Office clerk Stefan Kiszko spent 17 years in prison for the murder of schoolgirl Lesley Molseed in Rochdale in northwest England in 1975. Though he had confessed his guilt to the police at the time, evidence later proved...
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