Memory: Eyewitness testimony and cognitive interview Flashcards
Anxiety
A state of emotional and physical arousal, for example feeling tension and increased heart rate
Can effect the accuracy of eyewitness testimony
Context reinstatement
The witness should return to the crime scene in their mind and imagine the environment and their emotions
This is related to context-dependent forgetting
Composite sketch
A recreation of someone’s face used to help convict a criminal
Enhanced cognitive interview (ECI)
Fisher et al (1987) developed some additional elements of the CI to focus on the social dynamics of the interaction, including ideas such as reducing eyewitness anxiety, minimising distractions, getting the witness to speak slowly and asking open-ended questions
Eyewitness testimony
The ability of people to remember details of events, such as accidents and crimes, which they themselves observed
Four factors of cognitive interview
Report everything
Context reinstatement
Recall from a changed perspective
Recall in reverse order
Leading question
A question that suggests a certain answer, e.g. ‘was the knife in the accused’s left hand?’
Misleading information
Incorrect information given to the eyewitness after the event which can alter their testimony
This includes leading questions and post-event discussion
Post-event discussion
When witnesses discuss the event and this influences their memory of it
Recall from a changed perspective
Witnesses should recall the event from another perspective. This disrupts the effect of schema and expectations on recall. The schema you have for a setting generates expectations of what happened
Recall in reverse order
Events should be recalled in an order other than chronological, which helps prevent people reporting their expectations of how an event happened, and prevents dishonesty as it is harder for people to be untruthful when recalling in reverse order
Report everything
Witnesses are encouraged to include every single detail, even though it may seem irrelevant. Trivial details may be important or trigger other memories
Strengths of CI
Fisher et al showed detectives trained in CI obtained 63% more information than detectives not trained in CI
Kohnken carried out a meta-analysis of 53 different lab studies and showed that CI increases the effectiveness of EWT
Practical application - CI has improved EWT
Strengths of EWT
Loftus’ research into leading questions has helped the police to design questions when interviewing eyewitnesses - the research has practical application
The difference between a CI and a standard interview
A CI increases the amount of information reported, although some details may be irrelevant
A CI reduces the chance of dishonesty through the use of recall in reverse order
A CI requires witnesses to return to the crime scene in their mind