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Real-Life Communication

Forensic artists need to ask the right questions to elicit a detailed and accurate description from a witness. The wrong kind of question can skew the description.

Forensic artists dwell on seven features a person can't easily change: head shape, eyebrows, eyes, nose, mouth, chin, and ears. They never ask leading questions. Leading questions suggest the answer and put an image into the witness's mind.

An example of a leading question is: "Was he wearing a ring?" A non-leading question would be: "Did you notice anything about his fingers?"

Change the following leading questions into non-leading questions:

  1. Were his eyes narrow?
  2. Were his eyes blue?
  3. How large were his eyes?
  4. Did he have a scar on his face?
  5. Did he have a large head?
  6. How prominent was his nose?
  7. Was he a young man?
  8. Did he have a moustache?
  9. Did he have thin lips?
  10. Were his eyebrows bushy?