Cognitive - Main Study Flashcards
What study are we investigating and what was the aim of this research
We are investigating Loftus and Palmer (1974) This research this research is about the accuracy of EWT, and the extent to which leading questions, where the question suggests a certain responce can impact the persons recollection of events. This particular reaearch looked at the effect of leading questions on peoples perception of speed of cars during an accident.
Describe the methodology of Loftus and Palmer (1974)
The study consists of TWO laboratory experiments.
It uses an independant groups design and the two experiments used a different set of participants -
Experiment 1 had 45 participants
Experiment 2 had 150 participants
Describe the clips watched by the participants
Firstly the Participants were (unknowingly) split into 5 groups of 9
The participants were shown 7 film clips of different road accidents.
The length of these clips ranged from 5 - 30 seconds each
These clips originally came from a drivers saftey film.
What happened after the clips were shown to the participants
After watching each clip, the participants were given a questionaire that varied depending on the group they were in, all the questionaires asked them to give an account of what happened in the clip, as well as some specific questions. Of these specific questions was one KEY question, this question was:
‘about how fast were the cars going when they _____ into each other’
The five groups all had different words in the blank space
What were the five different words used to describe the crash in the various questionaires?
About how fast were the cars going when they ____ into each other?
smashed
colided
bumped
hit
contacted
The participants gave their responces in MPH
Describe the findings of the FIRST experement of Loftus and Palmer
Loftus and Palmer calculated the mean speed for each experemental group
they found that of the five, the verb smashed gave the highest estimate of 40.8mph while alternatively, they found the verb contacted gave the lowest mph estimate of 31.8mph.
eWhat the aim of the second experiment of Loftus and Palmer?
The first experiment saw if leading questions bias the details of a response.
This experiment aimed to investigate whether leading questions just bias the response, or if they actually changes the memory that is stored.
Describe the procedures for the first stage of the SECOND experiment
In stage 1 of the second experiment the 150 participants were split into groups of 3.
All groups were shown a film of multiple car crashes that all lasted less than 4 seconds.
They were then asked a set of questions including the critical question about speed.
Group 1 critical question: verb of hit
Group 2 critical question: verb of smashed
Group 3: no critical question
Describe the procedures of second stage of the SECOND experiment
In stage 2 of the second experiment, one week after the first stage, the participants were asked to return to the lab and were asked further questions about the filmed accidents they watched.
The critical question this time was a yes or no question asking whether or not there was broken glass in the accident.
In the actual film there was no broken glass - however, the study aimed to see if whether the different verbs used in the critical questions in stage 1 may have influenced / changed their memory.
Describe the findings of the SECOND experiment of Loftus and Palmer
In part 1 the results showed that just like experiment 1, participants gave higher speed estimates for the verb ‘smashed’ than ‘hit’
in part 2 it was found that participants in the ‘smashed’ condition were more than twice as likley to report seeing broken glass than those in the ‘hit’ or control (no question) conditon
How many participants reported seeing broken glass in each of the three groups?
Smashed: 16
Hit: 7:
Control: 6
(to calculate how many said no do this number minus 50 for each)
What can we conclude from each experiment
overall the findings demontrate that the form of condition can dramatically affect a witnesses answer to a particular question.
Experiment 1 has a response bias conclusion meaning the different speed estimates occur as the critical word influences or biases the response.
Experiment 2 suggests the memory itself has changed. This is because a week later they say if they recall broken glass or not. And those who wrongly recall seeing something they didnt would suggest if they asked the participant to fully describe everything they saw in the clip, there would be many pieces of incorrect information.
non-descriptive strengths and weaknesses of Loftus and Palmer.
Methodology:
Strength: Lab experiment ensures control
Weakness: Generalisability (Schacter et al)
Procedures:
Strength: High control over extraneous Variables / researcher bias
Weakness: Lacks ecological Validity (foster et al)
Ethics:
Strength: BPS guidelines
Weakness: Valid consent / Deception
Social implications:
Strength: Application (cog interviews)
Strength: minimises wrongful imprisonment
Give one strength of Loftus and Palmer in relation to the use of a contolled experiment (methodology)
One strength of Loftus and Palmer is the use of a controlled operationalised experiment as it helps to create a clear relationship between the verb used (IV) and the speed the participant thought the car was going (DV). This is done by deliberately manipulating the IV (verb) in the various groups.
This is further supported by the use of a laboratory experiment which helps to control potentially confounding variables so we know any change in the DV is due to the changing IV and not other factors.
Therefore, this increases the internal validity of the study as we know the results are because of the verb change (IV) and not any extraneous variables.
Give one weakness of methodology of Loftus and Palmer in relation to the participants
A weakness of the procedure Loftus and Palmer is that the study lacks population validity, this is because all the participants were US college students, this is a weakness as their results may not be representative of a general population.
This is supported by Schacter et al who found that elderly people are more prone to the influence of misinformation than younger people.