Familiarity vs Source Memory & Eyewitness Testimony - Chapter 7 Flashcards
1
Q
Source Monitoring Errors
A
The inability to properly attribute how (i.e., from what source) a memory originated
- Destination memory errors
2
Q
Familiarity and the Illusion of Truth
A
- Participants given a series of sentences and asked
to judge how interesting each statement was- E.g. “The average Swiss citizen eats 18 pounds of cheese per year” OR “Henry Ford forgot to put a reverse gear in his first automobile”
- Then presented with new sentences and asked to judge the credibility of information
- Certainly False………..Certainly True
3
Q
Mere Exposure Effect
A
Just being exposed to a stimuli repeatedly can increase later preferences
4
Q
Is Eyewitness Testimony Reliable?
A
- People misidentify and
misreport events despite
high confidence in their
recall ability - Juries much more likely to
believe a confident witness - > 75% of wrongful convictions attributed
to mistaken eyewitnesses
5
Q
Case of Ronald Cotton
A
- Ronald Cotton selected from police lineup
- Initial ID was tentative
- Confidence in ID increased over time
6
Q
Familiarity vs Source Memory
A
- Participants shown staged crime
- 2-3 days later shown other mug shots
- 4-5 days later asked to identify suspect from lineup