“…In the last decade, there has been growing interest in so‐called “super‐recognizers” (SRs): people with an extraordinary ability to recognize faces (Bobak, Hancock, & Bate, ; Robertson, Noyes, Dowsett, Jenkins, & Burton, ; Russell, Duchaine, & Nakayama, ). Although much of the published work examining these individuals has theoretical intentions (e.g., Bate & Tree, ; Bennetts, Mole, & Bate, ; Bobak, Bennetts, Parris, Jansari, & Bate, ; Bobak, Parris, Gregory, Bennetts, & Bate, ; Ramon, Miellet, Dzieciol, Konrad, & Caldara, ; Russell, Chatterjee, & Nakayama, ), there has been increased applied interest in the deployment of SRs in policing and security settings. Yet the published literature lacks any large‐scale investigations into the consistency of superior face recognition skills either within or across tasks, with most studies merely requiring performance at an arbitrary level on a single task for inclusion in an SR sample (see Bate et al, ).…”