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11833561
Memory- factors affecting eyewitness testimony: misleading information
Descrição
AS level Psychology (Memory) Mapa Mental sobre Memory- factors affecting eyewitness testimony: misleading information, criado por Grace Fawcitt em 03-01-2018.
Sem etiquetas
psychology
as level
a level
aqa
memory
eyewitness testimony
psychology
memory
as level
Mapa Mental por
Grace Fawcitt
, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Criado por
Grace Fawcitt
quase 7 anos atrás
15
2
0
Resumo de Recurso
Memory- factors affecting eyewitness testimony: misleading information
Leading questions
Loftus and Palmer, 1974
Asked participants to watch a video of a car crash
They then asked questions about the crash, with one leading question
'How fast were the cars going when they ___________________ into each other?'
In the gap, different verbs were used
Hit
Smashed
Average speed: 40.5mph
Bumped
Collided
Contacted
Average speed: 31.8mph
Response bias explanation
Wording has no effect on memories, but affects how participants choose to respond
Substitution explanation
Wording changed participants' memory of the crash
Participants who heard 'smashed' were more likely to also report broken glass, even though there was none
Post event discussion
Gabbert, 2003
Participants all watched a video of the same crime, but from different perspectives. This meant they could see different elements of the crime scene.
The participants then discussed what they had seen.For example, one participant could see the title of a book being carried while the other could not
71% of participants reported elements of the crime that they had not seen
No participants in a control group in which there was no post event discussion reported anything they had not seen
Evaluation
Real life application
Research into misleading information has useful application in EWTs
Useful for the legal system
Artificial tasks
The tasks given to participants were not real- they watched film clips. Were they actually there, their response may have been different
Individual differences
Age
Elderly people are less accurate in EWTs
Demand characteristics
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