Memory and the Law Flashcards

1
Q

source monitoring errors, schemas, scripts, pragmatic inferences

A

Source Monitoring Errors: determining the origin of our beliefs and knowledge is a decision-making process
Schemas: mental models
Scripts: sequence of action
Pragmatic Inferences: inferences we make in a situation BASED ON OUR EXPECTATIONS; informed by prior knowledge and experience
^^When left unchecked, these have harmful side effects
Misinformation Effect: misleading post event info; VERY SIMILAR TO RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE WHERE NEW INFO STARTS COMPETING WITH PRE EXISTING MEMORY

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2
Q

Propensity Reasoning:

A

people reasoned because he had done robberies before and therefore had done this one

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3
Q

Factors that Influence Eyewitness Testimony/ Wrongful Conviction

A

Memory contamination
Stress
Suspect lineups
How investigators phrase questions
Witness’s poor eyesight
Cross-race effect
Witness bias

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4
Q

Tunnel vision investigation

A

lack of fulsome police investigation, other possible suspects, gathering evidence process, if relevant but contradictory evidence is withheld or not presented during the trial by prosecution

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5
Q

Dock Identification:

A

where person is held and witness walks in and looks at the person and then identifies them but couldn’t identify them before

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6
Q

Concealed Information Tests

A

Detect specific concealed information, which a trier of fact could consider as a part of the totality of the circumstances to infer guilt
Includes ANS responses, believed to be involuntary like skin conductance response (FILL IN)
NOT ACCURATE

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7
Q

EEG ‘

A

Measures summed spatial and temporal electrical activity in the brain generated by neurons
When a neuron is stimulated by a signal from the environment or another neuron, it triggers a complex process of electrical signaling
P300 ERP CNS RESPONSE: positive deflection that occurs in the parietal region of the brain during recollection
Approximately 300-800ms after the presentation of a rare and meaningful stimulus, within a series that includes frequently presented/less meaningful irrelevant stimuli

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8
Q

Complex TRial Protocol

A

Involves probe: evidence that is memorable and known only to the accused
Irrelevants: equally plausible alternatives to the probe stimulus
Targets and Non Targets: irreverent stimuli that require unique responses
Two Trial Presentation per Sequence: T 1 + T 2 = full sequence, presented many times over and over again
T 1: reduces the susceptibility of this protocol to countermeasures, button press L on mouse regardless of whether the participant sees the probe item
T2: attention task, clicking right for the target and left for non-target, hold attention and decreases cognitive load to maximize the p300 amplitude
P300 AMPLITUDE IS GREATER FOR PROBE THAN IRRELEVANT STIMULI IN GUILTY PARTICIPANTS: EVEN THOUGH THEY TRIED TO LIE, THEIR BRAIN GAVE THEM AWAY
P300 AMPLITUDE IS THE SAME FOR PARTICIPANTS THAT WERE UNKNOWLEDGEABLE PROBE STIMULUS
PROBLEM, KNOWLEDGEABLE INNOCENT CONDITION: test doesn’t distinguish HOW you know about something or not, which doesn’t help with figuring out whether someone is guilty

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9
Q

P300 Measurement

A

The P300 (P3) wave is an event-related potential (ERP) component elicited in the process of decision making. It is considered to be an endogenous potential, as its occurrence links not to the physical attributes of a stimulus, but to a person’s reaction to it. More specifically, the P300 is thought to reflect processes involved in stimulus evaluation or categorization.
It is usually elicited using the oddball paradigm, in which low-probability target items are mixed with high-probability non-target (or “standard”) items. When recorded by electroencephalography (EEG), it surfaces as a positive deflection in voltage with a latency (delay between stimulus and response) of roughly 250 to 500 ms.[3] In the scientific literature a differentiation is often made in the P3, which is divided according to time: Early P3 window (300-400 ms) and Late P3 window (380-440 ms).[4]

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