OPINION OF THE COURT
William C. Donnino, J.
Defendant’s pretrial application for permission to call an [546]*546expert on identification requires a review of the current law, a detailing of the requirements of such an application, and a determination of the sufficiency of the instant application. For the reasons stated herein, the court finds the application not presently sufficient to inform the court’s discretion and grants the defendant leave to submit a supplemental application in accordance with this opinion.
I
The touchstone of identification testimony is its accuracy. Relevant expert identification testimony should, therefore, present specialized knowledge about identification that would help the finder of fact determine the accuracy of the identification.1 Expert identification testimony that would serve merely to confirm what a typical juror would know or would be told in the instructions of a trial court may, in the trial court’s discretion, be disallowed. At times, however, expert identification testimony, while confirming something a typical juror may know or be told in jury instructions, may nonetheless be required in order to add specialized information about the subject that is beyond the ken of the juror and relevant to the facts at hand. (See People v Lee, 96 NY2d 157, 162 [2001]; see also People v Cronin, 60 NY2d 430, 433 [1983] [“While jurors might be familiar with the effects of alcohol on one’s mental state, the combined impact of a case of beer, several marihuana cigarettes and 5 to 10 Valium tablets on a person’s ability to act purposefully cannot be said as matter of law to be within the ken of the typical juror”].)2
[547]*547People v Lee authorized the admission of expert testimony on identification in the discretion of the trial court, but left it to the trial court to determine what should inform that discretion and how it should be exercised in individual cases.
In Lee, the trial court apparently accepted that there existed valid expert testimony on identification that was relevant to a determination of the accuracy of the identification in that case. Procedurally, the trial court considered the application during the trial. The Court of Appeals found that to be significant because it provided the trial court with a firsthand account of the identification testimony and the evidence that corroborated that identification. This permitted the trial court to “weigh” the application against such relevant factors as “the centrality of the identification issue and the existence of corroborating evidence.” (People v Lee, 96 NY2d at 163.) Having done so, the trial court’s denial of the application for the expert identification testimony was held to have been within its sound discretion.3
Lee thus suggests that if a contested identification is corroborated by other evidence, there may be no need for expert testimony. On the other hand, if identification testimony is not corroborated by other evidence or the other evidence is not compelling, expert testimony may be warranted.
Limitations on when to permit expert identification testimony may in part stem from a concern about how wide to open the door to expert identification testimony in the absence of a developed record or history in New York as to the validity and nature of expert identification testimony. Lee recognized that such expert testimony “may involve novel scientific theories and techniques,” and thus may require an initial determination of “whether the proffered expert testimony is generally ac[548]*548cepted by the relevant scientific community.” (People v Lee, 96 NY2d.at 162.) That foundational question was apparently not in issue in Lee.
II
What procedure should be followed and what information should a court consider in order to determine whether to admit expert identification testimony? At least until the law of New York settles on the parameters of expert identification testimony, the application for the admission of such testimony should be made pretrial because the trial court may need to conduct a hearing and that cannot be conveniently done during a trial.
An application to admit expert identification testimony should: (1) to the extent known set forth the pertinent alleged facts of the identification and any corroborative evidence;4 (2) set forth the name and qualifications of the witness and the “proffered” testimony; (3) correlate the proffered testimony with the facts of the case to demonstrate the relevance of the expert testimony; (4) explain whether the testimony involves “novel scientific theories and techniques,” and if it does, include an offer of proof as to its general acceptance by the relevant scientific community; and (5) explain why the testimony is warranted if an existing standard jury instruction (CJI[NY]2d Identification — One Witness [2001]) would appear to cover the area of the proffered expert testimony.
Once the application is complete, to the extent controverted, a hearing to amplify or verify any of the applicant’s assertions may be required. In some instances, as in Lee, a court may need to defer its final decision until pertinent portions of the People’s case have been heard at trial.
[549]*549III
The defendant’s application does not presently meet the foregoing criteria.
From the defendant’s application, we learn that the defendant is charged with attempted murder of a cab driver while he was a passenger in the cab. There is no indication whether the incident took place in the daytime or at night, where the passenger was picked up, how long the two were together in the car, or of other relevant identification facts. It is alleged that there is no corroborative evidence of the identification.
On the nature of the identification, the application first specifies that the complainant gave a detailed description of the passenger and of his clothing. The defendant claims to be older and somewhat heavier than the description; otherwise, the description appears to match the defendant. Next, the application alleges that a composite drawing of the passenger was done, but does not state when it was done or whether it resembled the defendant. Lastly, the application states that the defendant was identified in a “photo line up” five days after the incident, and in a “live line up” 13 days after the photographic identification.5
The expert’s name is provided but not his qualifications. There is thus no indication whether the witness is properly qualified to testify as an identification expert. The expert’s testimony is not detailed; it is proffered primarily in general terms and in some instances not correlated to the specified factual allegations. There is no indication that the testimony is necessary notwithstanding that some of the proffered testimony, at least as proffered in the application, would appear covered by the standard identification charge. There is no representation of whether the proffered testimony is generally accepted by the relevant scientific community.6
[550]
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OPINION OF THE COURT
William C. Donnino, J.
Defendant’s pretrial application for permission to call an [546]*546expert on identification requires a review of the current law, a detailing of the requirements of such an application, and a determination of the sufficiency of the instant application. For the reasons stated herein, the court finds the application not presently sufficient to inform the court’s discretion and grants the defendant leave to submit a supplemental application in accordance with this opinion.
I
The touchstone of identification testimony is its accuracy. Relevant expert identification testimony should, therefore, present specialized knowledge about identification that would help the finder of fact determine the accuracy of the identification.1 Expert identification testimony that would serve merely to confirm what a typical juror would know or would be told in the instructions of a trial court may, in the trial court’s discretion, be disallowed. At times, however, expert identification testimony, while confirming something a typical juror may know or be told in jury instructions, may nonetheless be required in order to add specialized information about the subject that is beyond the ken of the juror and relevant to the facts at hand. (See People v Lee, 96 NY2d 157, 162 [2001]; see also People v Cronin, 60 NY2d 430, 433 [1983] [“While jurors might be familiar with the effects of alcohol on one’s mental state, the combined impact of a case of beer, several marihuana cigarettes and 5 to 10 Valium tablets on a person’s ability to act purposefully cannot be said as matter of law to be within the ken of the typical juror”].)2
[547]*547People v Lee authorized the admission of expert testimony on identification in the discretion of the trial court, but left it to the trial court to determine what should inform that discretion and how it should be exercised in individual cases.
In Lee, the trial court apparently accepted that there existed valid expert testimony on identification that was relevant to a determination of the accuracy of the identification in that case. Procedurally, the trial court considered the application during the trial. The Court of Appeals found that to be significant because it provided the trial court with a firsthand account of the identification testimony and the evidence that corroborated that identification. This permitted the trial court to “weigh” the application against such relevant factors as “the centrality of the identification issue and the existence of corroborating evidence.” (People v Lee, 96 NY2d at 163.) Having done so, the trial court’s denial of the application for the expert identification testimony was held to have been within its sound discretion.3
Lee thus suggests that if a contested identification is corroborated by other evidence, there may be no need for expert testimony. On the other hand, if identification testimony is not corroborated by other evidence or the other evidence is not compelling, expert testimony may be warranted.
Limitations on when to permit expert identification testimony may in part stem from a concern about how wide to open the door to expert identification testimony in the absence of a developed record or history in New York as to the validity and nature of expert identification testimony. Lee recognized that such expert testimony “may involve novel scientific theories and techniques,” and thus may require an initial determination of “whether the proffered expert testimony is generally ac[548]*548cepted by the relevant scientific community.” (People v Lee, 96 NY2d.at 162.) That foundational question was apparently not in issue in Lee.
II
What procedure should be followed and what information should a court consider in order to determine whether to admit expert identification testimony? At least until the law of New York settles on the parameters of expert identification testimony, the application for the admission of such testimony should be made pretrial because the trial court may need to conduct a hearing and that cannot be conveniently done during a trial.
An application to admit expert identification testimony should: (1) to the extent known set forth the pertinent alleged facts of the identification and any corroborative evidence;4 (2) set forth the name and qualifications of the witness and the “proffered” testimony; (3) correlate the proffered testimony with the facts of the case to demonstrate the relevance of the expert testimony; (4) explain whether the testimony involves “novel scientific theories and techniques,” and if it does, include an offer of proof as to its general acceptance by the relevant scientific community; and (5) explain why the testimony is warranted if an existing standard jury instruction (CJI[NY]2d Identification — One Witness [2001]) would appear to cover the area of the proffered expert testimony.
Once the application is complete, to the extent controverted, a hearing to amplify or verify any of the applicant’s assertions may be required. In some instances, as in Lee, a court may need to defer its final decision until pertinent portions of the People’s case have been heard at trial.
[549]*549III
The defendant’s application does not presently meet the foregoing criteria.
From the defendant’s application, we learn that the defendant is charged with attempted murder of a cab driver while he was a passenger in the cab. There is no indication whether the incident took place in the daytime or at night, where the passenger was picked up, how long the two were together in the car, or of other relevant identification facts. It is alleged that there is no corroborative evidence of the identification.
On the nature of the identification, the application first specifies that the complainant gave a detailed description of the passenger and of his clothing. The defendant claims to be older and somewhat heavier than the description; otherwise, the description appears to match the defendant. Next, the application alleges that a composite drawing of the passenger was done, but does not state when it was done or whether it resembled the defendant. Lastly, the application states that the defendant was identified in a “photo line up” five days after the incident, and in a “live line up” 13 days after the photographic identification.5
The expert’s name is provided but not his qualifications. There is thus no indication whether the witness is properly qualified to testify as an identification expert. The expert’s testimony is not detailed; it is proffered primarily in general terms and in some instances not correlated to the specified factual allegations. There is no indication that the testimony is necessary notwithstanding that some of the proffered testimony, at least as proffered in the application, would appear covered by the standard identification charge. There is no representation of whether the proffered testimony is generally accepted by the relevant scientific community.6
[550]*550To be sure, properly qualified, some of the proffered testimony may be helpful to a jury in determining the accuracy of the identification in this case where identification is central to the case and the only evidence of identification is by a single witness. But, the defendant fails to demonstrate how some of the proffered testimony would be relevant and helpful to the jury in this case.
For example, it is proffered that expert testimony on “cross-racial identification” is required. “Cross-racial identification” is an area not covered by the current standard jury instruction and is an area that may lend itself to expert testimony. In this case, however, it is alleged that such testimony is necessary because the complainant is Hispanic and the defendant is African-American. “Hispanic” is not, however, a racial classification. (State v Valentine, 345 NJ Super 490, 785 A2d 940 [2001].) The race of the complainant is not specified.
The application hypothesizes that the “opportunity for the complainant to observe in this case was limited,” and it concludes that expert testimony is necessary “as to ‘exposure time.’ ” Aside from the paucity of facts relating to this issue, if the proffered expert testimony is limited to telling the jury that the amount of time a witness observes a perpetrator affects the accuracy of the identification, that is not a fact beyond the ken of the typical juror. The standard jury instruction also recognizes that factor and the jury would accordingly be so informed by the judge.7 The defendant’s application needs to be more specific as to the proffered expert testimony, and its relevance to helping the jury evaluate the accuracy of the identification in this case.
Noting a delay in the identification of the defendant (albeit we do not know when the composite drawing was done or what it revealed), it is proffered that expert testimony is necessary [551]*551to show that a witness’s memory of a perpetrator diminishes with time. Because the typical juror undoubtedly understands that memory diminishes over time, and the subject is reflected in the standard jury instructions, the defendant needs to expand on what the expert testimony, in the context of the facts of this case, will add that will be helpful to the jury in evaluating the accuracy of the identification.8
The defendant proffers expert testimony that the “stress” of a criminal incident would detract from the accuracy of an identification. The People argue that this is not necessarily so. (See People v Breland, 83 NY2d 286, 295 [1994].) Stress is indeed one area of identification where advocates at a criminal trial often have different, and even opposite opinions, as to whether it contributes to an accurate or inaccurate identification. Valid expert identification testimony on the subject should be helpful to the typical juror. In this case, however, there was a period of time, not yet specified, immediately before the alleged crime, during which the complaining witness saw the defendant under circumstances that were not stressful. That fact may not defeat the application for expert testimony on this subject, but it does require an offer of proof tailored to the facts of this case.
[552]*552The application proffers expert testimony on “ ‘reconstructive memory,’ i.e., that input from other sources, such as the police, may substantially alter or fill in a witness’s perceptions and recollections.” The defendant asserts that such took place here; but, absent further evidence as to what actually occurred here, that conclusion is presently speculative. It may be that given the nature of this purported expert testimony, a final determination on whether to admit such testimony may need to await an evidentiary hearing or the trial. In any event, a typical juror knows that an identification may be influenced by suggestion, and, the standard jury instruction informs them of that.9 Thus, while valid “reconstructive memory” testimony may be appropriate to this case, the defendant needs to detail further what the expert testimony will be and how the defendant expects it will be helpful to the jurors in this case.
IV
It is not the court’s intention to set up a procedural barrier to expert identification testimony. Concerns about the accuracy of an identification, particularly in a case dependant solely on the identification of one witness, have been paramount in the mind of any fair participant in, or observer of, our justice system. If scientific experimentation about the operation of our senses and memories can enlighten our determination of the accuracy of an identification, then we should embrace it without reservation. During this evolutionary stage of our law, however, focused papers are necessary to facilitate the process and resultant determinations.
Thus, given that we are in the early stages of the evolution of this area of the law in New York, the defendant’s application will not be denied; rather, it will be held in abeyance, and the defendant is granted permission to supplement the application in accordance with this opinion. The People will of course be provided an opportunity to submit a supplemental answer.10