Witness Interviewing Flashcards
The ‘Cognitive Interview’ (Geiselman and Fisher, 1984)
Phases
- Greet/establish rapport
- Explain aims
- Free recall
- Questioning
- Vary retrieval mnemonic
- Investigatively important questions
- Closure
Four main techniques (mnemonics)
- Report everything
- Mental reinstatement of context
- Reverse temporal order
- Change perspective
Testing the mnemonics: Reverse Temporal Order
Theory
Reducing negative impacts of scripts (Shank & Abelson, 1977)
Vs.
Temporal clustering central to Context Maintenance and Retrieval - Polyn, Norman, and Kahana (2008)
Method
Mock crime witness – video of mobile phone theft
Retrieval coded for new items – free recall / second recall phases
Testing the mnemonics: Mental reinstatement of context
Theory
Mental reinstatement of context technique and the encoding-specificity principle (Tulving & Thompson, 1973)
Vs.
Deficits in episodic memory in individuals with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (Klein, Chan & Loftus, 1999
MRC demands language and concurrent processing abilities, ASD individuals find difficult (e.g., Gabig, 2008)
Method
Unguided versus MRC versus Sketch RC techniques
The problem with investigative decisions…
People make crucial, time-critical decisions under uncertainty
Demands can outstrip cognitive resources suboptimal decision-making
Royal Commission on Criminal Justice (1993)
“the most common type of error in crime investigation is that of decision-making”
Little research on SIO Decision-making
Cognitive biases
Satisficing
Simon (1980) – individuals minimise ‘search’
Confirmation bias
Wason (1977) – individuals seek confirmatory evidence
Investigative expertise
Method
Insurance fraud handling; Ethnographic observation
Realistic, rich, longitudinal, non-invasive, socially interactive, capturing exceptions and commonalities
Observations, interviews, meetings field notes
Explanation building
Hypothesis testing
Procedural decision making
Confirmation bias?: Serious crimes decision log analysis
Formal repository of decisions and actions made during the course of a major investigation.
Summarisation; Offence; MO; SIOs; Victim(s); Suspect(s); Witnesses; outcome
Timeline representation (Topic/hypothesis/evidence)