Task 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Hjelmsäter Roos af, E., Öhman, L., & Granhag, P.A. (2016). The sinking of M/V Estonia: An archival study of the survivors’ witness reports.

AIM
METHOD
RESULTS
LIMITATIONS

A
  • examine applicability of findings of eyewitness studies on real life traumatic events
  • retrospectively analysed the memory reports of the surviving passengers from real life ship sinking of the M/V Estonia (989 persons sank/ only 137 persons survived) = traumatic event with high stress and high involvement
  • they report were given during police interview about what had happened and were not done by the researchers themselves
  • statement were read several times to analyse themes and were compared to the other finding from the investigation
  • 12 themes were identified
  • half of those themes were included in over 50% of the reports
  • some themes included in many reports (list and emergency announcement = salient or important), some themes less reported (duration, engine sound)
  • the crew remembered reports included more themes then the passenger reports (for example: all of them remembered that the ship sank stern first, while only 2/3 of passengers reported that)
  • -> fragmented but mostly accurate reports
  • -> taken all together more complete report
  • -> salient and important for surviving stimuli more reported
  • -> visual stimuli more reported
  • no experimental setting –> no control over confounding etc.
  • no control group
  • interview not conducted by researcher in structured manner (don’t know how conducted)
  • retrospectively reconstructed the events (don’t know what really happened –> limited inference about the accuracy)
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2
Q

Experiment vs. Real Life Memory

Hjelmsäter et al.

A
  • there is a difference of experimental studies on eyewitnesses and real life event eyewitnesses
  • -> witness involvement (more involved = more accurate report)
  • -> stress levels (stress has supposedly negative effect on memory)
  • -> memory (real life usually more accurate, experiment more vulnerable to false memory)
  • auditory memory less good then visual
  • temporal observation (usually reported retrospectively) –> short time over- longer time underestimated
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3
Q

Peterson, C. (2015). A decade later: Adolescents’ memory for medical emergencies.

AIM
METHOD
RESULTS
(LIMITATIONS)

A
  • explore adolescent’s recall of a salient emotional event a decade after it occurred, focusing on whether discussion through formal interviews influences that recall
  • decade earlier participants (39) were recruited at a hospital
  • they (3-5 year-olds) and their parents were interviewed about an injury and the following treatment that brought them into the hospital
  • half of the participants had a reinstatement interview after 5 years
  • the participants were interviewed variously often before the present interview (2-5 times)
  • during the present interview the interviewer wanted to asses the accuracy, completeness (reliability)

injury
- accuracy had deteriorated somewhat, recall of completeness, components and unique details were still very high (85%)
- accuracy still quite high (70%)
- more detailed reports then initially
hospital
- poor recall (31% complete)
–> maybe less comprehensible for children
- number of pre-interviews and presence of the reinstatement interview did not have a significant impact –> still believed that reminiscing with family helped consolidation

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4
Q

Krix, A.C., Sauerland, M., Lorei, C., & Rispens, I. (2015). Consistency across repeated eyewitness interviews: Contrasting police detectives’ beliefs with actual eyewitness performance.

AIM
METHOD
RESULTS
LIMITATIONS

A
  • compare the accuracy of eyewitnesses with the belief about the accuracy that police officers hold
  • 2x2 design
  • 84 students in the memory group
  • 93 detectives in the estimation group
    memory group
  • were shown a film of a robbery
  • first interview 30 minutes later (SAI + free recall)
  • second interview one week later
    estimation group
  • police participants got also to view the clip
  • got a questionnaire where they were supposed to estimate the accuracies for the different time points as well as for consistent, forgotten, reminiscent and contradictory information and overall
  • -> siehe table
  • overall much better actual memory accuracy than estimated
  • over 80% except for the contradicting facts (40%)
  • the estimation was for the most part even below that, except for the first interview and the consistent info (45%, 55%)
  • -> reminiscence is common
  • -> accuracy is overall high, only contradicting is a sign of low accuracy
  • -> police officers greatly underestimate eyewitness abilities
  • -> should be incorporated in the training (don’t generalize mistrust)
  • estimation group provided estimates for the first and second recall attempt during a single session
  • before providing estimates, estimation group watched the crime scene = unrealistic (needed to have a control state here)
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5
Q

Smeets, T., Candel, I., & Merckelbach, H. (2004). Accuracy, completeness, and consistency of emotional memories.

AIM
METHOD
RESULTS
LIMITATIONS

A
  • to examine the completeness, accuracy and consistency of emotional memory (because judges and layers tend to think it is quite poor)
  • 44 Maastricht students
  • they watched a rather emotional film clip
  • then they had to rate the film clip (checking if emotional)
  • once after 3 minutes once after 3 weeks they had to give a written account about what happened in the clip (free-recall)
  • accuracy on both account was high (85%)
  • there were a some inconsistencies
  • the completeness was poorer in the free recall (55%, 51%)
  • replicated the results in a study with a questionnaire with a few memory aids instead of free recall –> accuracy went up a bit, inconsistency rate stayed roughly the same, completeness went up (71%, 66%)
  • -> In line with previous research, found that accounts of emotional events can be highly accurate but tend to be incomplete
  • -> inconsistencies can NOT be seen as valid predictors of testimonial inaccuracy
  • biggest: watching a emotional 2 minute movie clip is not the same as being in a real life emotional situation (much less involvement)
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6
Q

Yuille, J.C., & Cutshall, J.L. (1986). A case study of eyewitness memory of a crime.

AIM
METHOD
RESULTS
LIMITATIONS

A
  • examine the accuracy of eyewitnesses of a real-life crime
  • case study
  • 13 witnesses of a shooting (one person dead, one wounded) agreed after the police interviewing to take part in the study
  • interview by researcher done 5 months after the shooting
  • witnesses were very accurate (comparable to other studies - around 80% –> differed for certain categories (people, objects) = possible weapon effect)
  • there was little change in amount or accuracy of recall over 5 months
  • some aspects of colour memory, and age, height, and weight estimations were found to be subject to error
  • eyewitnesses resisted leading questions, and their stress level at the time of the event appeared to have no negative effects on subsequent memory
  • no measure of stress at the time (just retrospective self-reporting)
  • only 13 participants
  • case study (none of the experimental control)
  • researcher only conducted the second interview
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7
Q
Factors which could influence memory performance:
Consolidation
Reinstatement
Salience
Repetition 
Timing of the interview
A

= processing that takes place when sensory input is transformed into more durable memory representation

= provision of cues/reminders of an event at a later point in time
–> can be helpful (Duh!)

= particularly noticeable or important events
(usually better remembered)

–> unclear which effects repeated interviews have on memory performance

  • Early interviews: most beneficial for later accurate recall –> children that were interviewed within the first week after an event were found to show more accurate recall after 1 year
  • Late initial interviews: reactivation: late interviews are more effective at maintaining LTM than early initial interview –> reencoding and retrieval of memory is more effortful
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8
Q

Ackerman, R., & Goldsmith, M. (2008). Control over grain size in memory reporting-with and without satisficing knowledge.
Experiment 1A
(Experiment 1B)

AIM
METHOD
RESULT
LIMITATION

A
  • examine whether people would rather sacrifice precision/informativeness or confidence in a knowledge question
  • 24 pp had to answer a questionnaire with either moderate knowledge items or low knowledge items
  • all of the items where questions which could be answered with numbers (How old was Jesus when he died? -> I made that up cause I did not find the examples in the article)
    —> MK items induce satisfied knowledge = satisfy correctness and informativeness criteria
    —> LK items induce unsatisfied knowledge = not satisfy both criteria at the same time –> violation of confidence criterion (prediction)
  • they were both a free grain and a fixed grain phase
    (- in the free grain phase pp could have answered as coarse as they wanted: Jesus was between 0-100 J.)
  • also, they indicated their confidence for each item
  • participants gave not coarse answers for the LK items in the free grain phase
  • they were (therefore) sign. less accurate
  • they were in both phases less confident about the LK items
  • replicated findings in experiment 1B (difference = no confidence rating for free grain phase, so that low confidence could not function as a caveat)
  • -> people sacrifice confidence and therefore accuracy for informativeness if both cannot be satisfied
  • it is subjective what is medium and low knowledge
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9
Q

Ackerman, R., & Goldsmith, M. (2008). Control over grain size in memory reporting-with and without satisficing knowledge.
Experiment 2
Experiment 3

AIM
METHOD
RESULT
LIMITATION

A
  • replicate the findings from experiment 1, but with learned vs. not learned items
  • same as experiment 1
  • difference: used only low knowledge items but of half of them the answers were first shown to the participants (initial learning phase)
  • outcome pattern responded to 1st experiment –> learned items = MK items, not learned items = LK items
  • limitation: not such a big sample
  • influence of the answering option “I don’t know” on the findings from the previous experiments
  • same as 1st experiment with the added option of “I don’t know”
  • -> Satisficing model: predicts that PP would rather give a very coarse answer than to say “I don’t know” –they have full control over the grain size of their answers so there is no need to respond don’t know
  • -> Dual-criterion model: PP don’t want to violate any of the criterions, so they would rather say that they don’t know the answer (giving a coarse answer is less socially acceptable than simply saying that one doesn’t know
  • dual criterion model correct (people used I don’t know option more often for LK items)
  • less criterion violations then in experiment 1a

-limitation: not big sample

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10
Q

Butt, M.M., Colloff, M.F., Magner, E., & Flowe, H. D. (2020) Eyewitness memory in the news can affect the strategic regulation of memory reporting.

Aim
Method
Results
Limitations

(Weber, & Brewer, 2008) did basically the same study
Brewer et al. 2018 also similar

A
  • examine the effect of news about the inaccuracy of eyewitnesses on the regulation of reporting
  • A 3 (eyewitness information condition; accurate, inaccurate, control) X 2 (grain size; fine or coarse) X 2(phase; one or two) mixed design
  • 226 pp watched a mock crime video
    1st phase
  • forced decision/closed questions about the crime (either fine or coarse grained)
    2nd phase
  • were given the answers (fine and coarse) they gave in phase 1 and were ask which option they would like to report or if no option
  • pps in the “eyewitnesses are inaccurate” condition were less confident about their memory and reported less details (more conservative criterion)
  • they did not made their answers coarser
  • in a 2nd experiment they repeated that with a large sample and line-up identification –> again less confident but, same performance as other groups
  • limitations?
  • in general, when the given the choice people are more informative then coarse!!! (Brewer & Weber, 2008)
  • when trying to get people to get to report mostly accurate but coarse info (might be helpful) –> they were successful in the cued recall forced reporting of coarse-grain condition
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11
Q

Evans, J.R., & Fisher, R.P. (2011). Eyewitness memory: Balancing the accuracy, precision and quantity of information through metacognitive monitoring and control.

A
  • examine 2 mechanisms of metacognitive control: Exercising a report option (withholding uncertain responses) and adjusting response precision (providing imprecise, but likely accurate, responses)
  • pps witnessed a mock crime
  • interviewed 10 minutes or 1 week later
  • -> 3 formats: free narrative, 15 cued recall (open), yes/no(closed) –> different level of control over their answer (grain size)
  • trade-offs between accuracy, quantity and precision of information
  • depending on the format: people maintained their accuracy by being more imprecise (free) or opting not to answer (yes/no)
    • Main effect: delay significantly less information and fewer details reported (all interview formats)
    • Marginal effect: delay slightly lower accuracy in comparison to no delay
    • Main effect: free narrative condition yields significantly higher accuracy rates, but less details
    ➔More confidence = more accurate
    ➔But overconfidence can give less precise answers
    ➔So, can’t rely on confidence
    ==> if the minimum-informative criteria is satisfied people do tailor their answers to be more accurate through metacognitive control
  • precision doesn’t have a standardised definition
  • delay is here a week, whereas in the real world it might imply a year
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12
Q

Important terms

Accuracy
Consistency
Completeness

Omission errors
Commission errors
Reminiscence

A

= n of correct answers given / n of answers given
= degree of how much the two or more recounts correlate with each other
= how much information they give of the entirety of information presented (need ground truth to determine that, or at least close to that)

➔All independent factors!!!

= leaving out one of the elements (might be forgetting)
= introduction of a totally new element which are not true (might be false memories)
= details previously unrecalled (details mostly highly accurate)

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13
Q

Granularity

A

= levels of precision(more accurate) or coarseness(more general) of a response
•Fine grain, coarse grain
•Confidence criteria, informativeness criteria
> In a situation where both can’t be met, people tend to sacrifice the confidence criteria

–> control of grain size in memory is guided by correctness and informativeness

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14
Q

Social communication approach

A

= focuses on cooperative pragmatic principles involved in the explicit and implicit communication when question is asked
- take into account pragmatic considerations and tactic assumptions relating to the background and existing knowledge of the questioner (personal goals, purpose of question)
• adjust level of detail of information they convey according to their perception of how much the listener needs to know!

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15
Q

Metacognitive approach

A

= memory reporting is guided by personal and social goals and the monitoring and control processes that underlie strategic memory performance –> forms a memory theory

• previous findings show that memory performance depends on an interaction btw memory content and metacognitive processes that guide memory search and retrieval, determine whether answers are reported etc

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16
Q

The satisficing model for the control of grain size (Goldsmith)

A

Considers correctness and informativeness considerations Satisficing model:
respondent strives to provide as much info possible,
if the subjective probability of being correct satisfied some reasonable minimum level
-> Level of minimum-confidence criterion is assumed to depend on the relative incentives for correctness and informativeness in answering a certain question in a certain situation (higher criterion when correctness is emphasized

17
Q

Relative expected utility maximizing model (Goldsmith)

A

Respondents calculate the subjective expected utility of candidate answers at various grain sizes (take both subjective value of in/correct answer and subjective probability of in/correct answer and compare these values to find the maximal subjective expected utility)

18
Q

Dual criterion model (Ackerman)

  • Problem with models before
  • What is actually supported by research?
  • SK
  • UK
A
  • -> minimum-confidence interval = people choose grain size to have a least some accuracy (confidence), informativeness is implicitly adjusted
    - -> that’s not the case in real life

!!!actually: minimum informativeness criterion

  • SK (satisfying knowledge = confidence) state when one’s level of knowledge is sufficient to allow one to provide an answer that simultaneously satisfies both the confidence and the informativeness criteria
  • UK(unsatisfying knowledge = no confidence) you’ll not be confident, then you will not say much because you feel that it is not as informative