2.7 Misleading Questions - Factors affecting accuracy of EWT

Descripción

A level (memory) Psychology Mapa Mental sobre 2.7 Misleading Questions - Factors affecting accuracy of EWT, creado por Alicja Klak el 02/01/2023.
Alicja Klak
Mapa Mental por Alicja Klak, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Alicja Klak
Creado por Alicja Klak hace casi 2 años
2
0

Resumen del Recurso

2.7 Misleading Questions - Factors affecting accuracy of EWT
  1. Leading Questions
    1. Loftus and Palmer (1974)
      1. Procedure: Had 45 participants watching clips of car accidents then asking questions about the accident. In the critical question, participants had to answer how fast the car was going. 5 groups of participants and each group was asked the question using a different verb : hit, contacted, bumped, collided, smashed
        1. Findings: Mean speed for contacted was 31.8 mph whereas the verb smashed had 40.5 mph mean.
      2. Response-bias explanation
        1. Suggests that the wording of the question has no real effect on the memories but just influences how they decide to answer. Conducted a second experiment in which participants with the word smashed were more likely to report seeing broken glass when there was none.
      3. Post-Event discussion
        1. Gabbert et al (2003)
          1. Procedure: Studied participants in pairs, watching a video of a crime but from two different perspectives. This means each participant could see elements of the event the other couldnt. They then discussed what they had seen.
            1. Findings: 71% of participants mistakenly recalled aspects of the event they did not see in the video but discussed.
          2. Memory contamination
            1. When discussing information, their memories may become altered or distorted. They combine misinformation from other witnesses.
            2. Memory conformity
              1. Participants may go along with information in order to win the approval of other people.
            3. Evaluation
              1. Strengths:
                1. Real world application. Important uses in the criminal justice system, as consequences of misleading questions can be very serious
                2. Weaknesses:
                  1. Evidence against substitution. EWT is more accurate for some aspects of an event than others. Presumably the participants' attention was focused on central features. Suggests that the original memories survived and were not distorted.
                    1. Evidence challenging memory conformity. Skagerberg and Wright (2008) showed their participants two versions of a film, their views rather than being changed blended together.
                  Mostrar resumen completo Ocultar resumen completo

                  Similar

                  MEMORY FLASHCARDS
                  georgina.hope99
                  Memory - AQA Psychology Unit 1 GCSE - created from Mind Map
                  joshua6729
                  Memory full quiz
                  Molly Macgregor
                  Learning and Memory
                  up723339
                  Chapter 6: Long-Term Memory: Structure
                  krupa8711
                  DefinitionsMemory
                  becky_e
                  Memory Key words
                  Sammy :P
                  Psychology A1
                  Ellie Hughes
                  History of Psychology
                  mia.rigby
                  Psychology subject map
                  Jake Pickup
                  Biological Psychology - Stress
                  Gurdev Manchanda