Loftus and Palmer Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the background of the study

A

-Loftus was interested in the fragility of memory and how easily we forget things
-Heavily interested in the validity of eye witness testimony, believed stress could influence the way they had remembered the event and how the interview was carried out

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2
Q

Define ‘Schema theory’

A

The ability to retain information and to demonstrate this retention on information through behaviour

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3
Q

Define ‘Reconstructive memory’

A

The way in which our biases and prejudices can unconsciously lead us to have memories of events that are distortions of what actually happened

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4
Q

Define ‘Leading questions’

A

A question which by its form of content, suggests what answer is desired

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5
Q

What was the aim of the study?

A

To investigate the effect of language on memory

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6
Q

What was the sample for experiment one?

A

15 students split into 5 groups of 9, from Washington USA

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7
Q

What was the DV?

A

The estimated speed of the car in the videos

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8
Q

What was the IV?

A

The word that changed in the critical question:
-Hit
-Collided
-Smashed
-Contacted
-Bumped

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9
Q

What was the critical question?

A

How fast were the cars going when they ____ each other?

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10
Q

What type of experiment was it?

A

Lab experiment in a controlled setting

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11
Q

Was was the first stage of the procedure?

A

Watch: students shown 7 clips from Evergreen safety council of the Seattle police department
-Between 5 and 30 seconds
-Shown in different orders

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12
Q

What was the second stage of the procedure?

A

Questions: after each clip participants were given a
questionnaire
Would give an account, then answer questions including the critical question

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13
Q

What was the mean speed estimate for ‘smashed’?

A

40.8 mph

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14
Q

What was the mean speed estimate for ‘hit’?

A

34.0 mph

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15
Q

What were the conclusions?

A

-People are not good at estimating the speed of cars
-The form of a question does change the answer given by a witness

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16
Q

What were the two explanations suggested for the results?

A

Response bias and memory change

17
Q

What was the experimental design for experiment two?

A

Independent measures

18
Q

What is the sample for experiment two?

A

150 students split into 3 groups of 50

19
Q

What was the first part of the procedure?

A

Participants watched a one min clip of a multiple car crash then answered questions on it
Asks a question on speed unless control group

20
Q

What was stage two procedure?

A

A week later participants returned to answer 10 more questions including the critical one: ‘Did you see any broken glass?’

21
Q

What were the three conditions/IV?

A

-Hit
-Smashed
-Control

22
Q

What was the DV?

A

The effect of being asked the question on speed

23
Q

What were the numbers of participants that recalled seeing broken glass when there wasn’t any?

A

-Smashed: 16/50
-Hit: 7/50
-Control group: 6/50

24
Q

What was the conclusion?

A

The form of a question does change a witnesses memory

25
Q

What was the explanation of results?

A

-Own perception
-External information

26
Q

Which ethical guidelines were followed?

A

Consent
Confidentiality
Right to withdraw

27
Q

Which ethical guidelines were broken?

A

Protection from harm
Deception

28
Q

What the study ethnocentric?

A

-Yes-only conducted in Washington, USA
-No-can be argued that memory is universal, so it doesn’t matter

29
Q

Internal reliability

A

-Standardised-all watched the same crash and answered the same questions
-Same amount of time between questions in experiment two

30
Q

External reliability study one

A

No, only nine participants per condition which isn’t enough to establish a consistent effect

31
Q

External reliability study two

A

Yes, 50 participants in each condition, which is enough to establish a consistent effect despite outliers

32
Q

Internal validity

A

-Very controlled so unlikely to have extraneous variables
-People potentially saw broken glass as demand characteristics

33
Q

Population validity

A

No-all students at the same university and a similar age

34
Q

Ecological validity

A

-Staged car accidents may nor replicate real life responses
-If you were a witness to a crash you’d probably have to answer similar questions