Factors affecting the accuracy of eyewitness testimony: Misleading Information; Post Event Discussion and Leading Questions Flashcards
What did Loftus and Palmer do
- participants watched clips of car accidents and then they were asked questions about it
- in a critical question, participants were asked how fast the cars were travelling and the verb changed from ‘hit, contacted, smashed’
What did Loftus and Palmer find?
- the verb contacted resulted in a mean estimated speed of 31.8 mph
the verb smashed it was 40.5mph
What did Loftus and Palmer conclude?
the leading question biased the eyewitness recall of an event
What does the response-bias explanation suggest?
- the wording of the question has no real effect on the participants memories, but just influences how they decide to answer
What did Loftus and Palmer second experiment find?
- the wording of the question affects the participants memory of the film clip and this was shown when the participants heard ‘smashed’ they reported seeing broken glass when there was none
Post-event discussion
when co-witnesses discuss the events with each other and their testimonies may become contaminated. this is because they combine information which adds to their own memories
what did Gabbert et al do?
- each participants watched a video of the same crime but filmed from different points of view and this meant each participants could see elements of the video that the others couldn’t
- they then discussed it with the other participant and then completed a test of recall
What did Gabbert et al find?
- 71% of the participants mistakenly recalled aspects of the event that they did not see in the video but had picked up in the discussion
- in the control group there was 0%
What did Gabbert et al conclude?
- memory conformity where witnesses often go along with each other to win social approval or because they believe the other witnesses are right and they are wrong
What is a strength of ewt?
useful real-life applications
How has research into leading questions led to useful applications?
- Loftus believes that leading questions can distort the the persons own memory so police officers must be careful when phrasing their questions
- also in court trials
What is a limitation of Loftus and palmer’s study?
the tasks are artificial
How are Loftus and Palmer’s study artificial?
- they watched film clips of accidents
- this means they had a different experience from a real accident and thus lacks the stress of a real accident
Why is Loftus and Palmer’s study artificial a limitation?
artificial tasks tell us very tilted about how leading questions affect ewt in real crimes and thus the study findings are questionable
What is a weakness of Loftus and Palmer’s research?
- lacks ecological validity