Eyewitness Testimony: Leading Questions and Post Event Discussion Flashcards

1
Q

What are leading questions?

A

Questions where the wording may suggest to the witness that there is a desired answer.

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2
Q

Name the researchers who studied leading questions and their effects on eye witness testimony.

A

Loftus and Palmer

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3
Q

What was the aim of Loftus and Palmer’s experiment?

A

To see how leading questions affect the accuracy of memory.

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4
Q

How many PPTs were involved in Loftus and Palmer’s experiment?

A

45

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5
Q

How were PPTs in Loftus and Palmer’s study split into groups?

A

They were randomly divided into 5 groups of different sizes.

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6
Q

PPTs in Loftus and Palmer’s study were shown how many video clips of what?

A

7 video clips of traffic accidents.

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7
Q

What did PPTs receive after each of the clips in Loftus and Palmer’s study?

A

A questionnaire containing various questions about the car accidents.

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8
Q

What was the critical question in the questionnaires in Loftus and Palmer’s study?
What 5 words were used?

A

‘About how fast were the cars going when they _______ each other?’
Bumped, collided, hit, smashed, contacted.

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9
Q

When the critical verb ‘contacted’ was used, what was the mean estimate of speed in Loftus and Palmer’s study?

A

32mph.

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10
Q

When the critical verb ‘smashed’ was used, what was the mean estimate of speed in Loftus and Palmer’s study?

A

41mph

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11
Q

In the 2nd Loftus and Palmer study, how many PPTs were involved?

A

150

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12
Q

In the 2nd Loftus and Palmer study, what were PPTs shown in the video clip?

A

A multiple car accident.

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13
Q

In the 2nd Loftus and Palmer study, what did PPTs have to do after seeing the clip?

A

They had to answer a questionairre.

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14
Q

In the 2nd Loftus and Palmer study, describe how PPTs were divided into groups and state how the critical question for each of these groups differed.

A

They were divided into 3 groups of 50.
One group asked how fast cars were going when they smashed, the 2nd group asked how fast cars were going when they hit, the 3rd group not questioned about vehicle speed (control).

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15
Q

In the 2nd Loftus and Palmer study, they received another questionnaire a week later. What leading question was asked in this questionnaire that wasn’t included in the previous one?
How will this affect PPTs?

A

PPTs were asked if they saw any broken glass, when there was none in the original clip.
This caused PPTs to assume there was broken glass.

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16
Q

What is post event discussion?

A

PPTs discuss what they saw after witnessing a traumatic event, and combine each others memories with their own.

17
Q

Name the researcher who studied post event discussion.

A

Gabbert

18
Q

How were PPTs arranged in Gabbert’s study?

A

Pairs

19
Q

What did the pairs of PPTs have to watch in Gabbert’s study?
What did PPTs not know about the clip their pair was watching?

A

They watched clips of the same crime from different points of view, but they did not know this.

20
Q

After watching the clips, what did the PPTs in Gabbert’s study do?

A

They discussed what they had seen with eachother.

21
Q

After Gabbert’s PPTs had discussed, what did the PPTs then have to do? Who with?

A

They completed a recall test alone.

22
Q

What percentage of Gabbert’s PPTs mistakenly recalled aspects of an event they didn’t see after PED?

A

71%

23
Q

What percentage of Gabbert’s PPTs in the control group mistakenly recalled aspects of an event they didn’t see after PED?

A

0%

24
Q

Give 2 reasons why PED affects EWT.

A

Memory Conformity
Memory Contamination

25
Q

What is memory conformity?

A

Where witnesses often go along with each other for social approval or because they think the other person is more likely to be right than themselves.

26
Q

What is memory contamination?

A

Co witnesses discuss what they have seen and combine misinformation with each other, so memories distort.

27
Q

Explain the strength that research into misleading information has practical uses in the criminal justice system.
Why do officers need to be careful on how they phrase questions?
Why do psychologists sometimes visit court?
Overall, how does understanding the impacts of EWT lead to improving the justice system?

A

The consequences of inaccurate EWT can be serious. Loftus believes that leading questions can have a distorting effect on memory so police officers need to be careful on how they phrase questions when interviewing eye witnesses. Psychologists are sometimes asked to visit courts and explain the limits of EWTs to juries. This shows that psychologists can help to improve the way that the legal system works, especially by protecting innocent people from incorrect eyewitness testimony.

28
Q

Explain the limitation of the memory substitution explanation that says that EWT is more accurate for some aspects of an events than others.
Describe Sutherland and Hayne’s study, where PPTs were asked to recall events from a video clip, when prompted by misleading questions.
How did the misleading questions affect central details compared to peripheral details?
Why is memory substitution therefore a limited explanation?

A

For example, Sutherland and Hayne showed PPTs a video clip. When PPTs were asked misleading questions later on, their recall was more accurate for central details of the event rather than peripheral. Presumably the PPTs attention was focused on the central features of the event, which are more resistant to distortion because they require most of our attention. This is not predicted by the memory substitution explanation, therefore it is limited.

29
Q

Explain the limitation of there being evidence that PED alters EWT for the memory conformity explanation.
Explain Skagerberg and Wrights experiment (almost identical to Gabberts).
How did their findings suggest that memory is actually distorted by contamination by misleading PED?

A

Skagerberg and Wright showed their PPTs film clips. There were 2 versions of the clip and PPTs discussed it in pairs, each having seen different versions. They often did not report what they saw in the clips, or what they heard from the co witness, but blend of the two. This suggests that memory itself is distorted through contamination by misleading PED, not memory conformity.

30
Q

Explain the limitation of misleading information studies being conducted in labs.
Which 2 researchers argued that answers given by PPTs may have been due to demand characteristics?
Why might PPTs display demand characteristics?
What type of validity does this reduce?

A

While lab studies allow researchers to control variables, Zaragoza and McCloskey argue that many answers given by PPTs in labs are due to demand characteristics. This is because PPTs want to help researchers, so they lie, or they want to negatively affect their results. This means that researchers will not be sure that responses to questionnaires are a result of misleading information/PED or because PPTs are trying to be helpful. This means that internal validity is reduced.