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When discussing reliability of memory, what areas can you focus on?
Age when the event occurred
Age of participant
New information impacting already stored information (Loftus)
Influence/Leading questions
How does Bartlett's schema theory impact the reliability of memory?
Reconstruct their memories based on schematic information
How does Loftus's reconstructive memory model explain the reliability of memory?
Reconstruct memory but it is impacted by new information being stored in memory
How does Loftus support Bartlett?
Supports Bartlett's belief that memory can be unreliable.
but...Emphasized critical question (presupposition) and leading questions
Does everyone have a fantasy-reality boundary?
Yes
According to researchers, what is the best way to encourage truthful testimony by children about sexual abuse?
Question without pressuring
What age group is most vulnerable to suggestion?
preschoolers
Who conducted the research dealing with a man named Sam?
Ceci, 1994
What are the research conclusions about child eyewitness testimony implicating?
Children are often able to recall events with great accuracy BUT they also may say something happened when it did not.
When is a child more likely to be suggestible?
The child is very young
Child is influenced by preconceptions
Child has a desire to please the interviewer
Does research support that you can use an anatomically correct doll to distinguish between abused and non-abused children?
No. Children, whether abused or not, may play with an anatomically correct doll in a sexual way.
Post-Event Information
Information about an event provided AFTER (time doesn't matter)
Misleading Questions
Example of post-information
Questions that suggest information that is not entirely consistent with what happened
Recall
Retrieval in the absence of an prompts (Example: ERQ/ sketch artist)
Recognition
a measure of memory in which the person need only identify items previously learned, as on a multiple-choice test
Reconstructive Memory
Memory is an active (vs passive) process
New and old information interact with each other
eyewitness Testimony
a person who has personally seen something happen and so can give a first-hand description of it
Assumptions about the reliability of memory
-Schema influences what is encoded and what is retrieved (store and access memory)
-Memories can be distorted
What theory states that memories can be distorted based on new information or events?
Reconstructive Memory Model
Which memory model did the Reconstructive Memory Model adapt?
Multi-Store memory Model
Which research discussed in class is considered a criticism of Loftus' experimental research?
McCloskey and Zaragoza, 1985
Yuille and Cutshall, 1986
According to schema theory, what impacts the retrieval from LTM?
What schema we are using at the time
Aim of Cohen, 1981
We are more likely to remember information that is consistent with stereotypes/labels/schemas
Method of Cohen, 1981
Experiment
Design of Cohen, 1981
Independent Measures
Conclusion of Cohen, 1981
stereotypes are connected to previous memories and the development of new memories (schema)
Aim of Loftus and Palmer, 1974
To see if memory can be altered by misleading post-event information
-Post event information will integrate with the memory of the event and alter it
Method and Design for Loftus and Palmer, 1974
Two Experiment: Independent Measures
Independent Variable for Loftus and Palmer, 1974
Experiment 1:Emotional integrity of the verb
Experiment 2: critical question (control), Smashed/hit each other
Conclusion for Loftus and Palmer, 1974
Post event information does influence memory.
What are the two possible reasons that post event information influenced memory?
-Genuine memory change: question changes memory of the event
-Response bias: verbs of a higher intensity cause them to guess a higher estimate because they are uncertain
Which experiment in Loftus and Palmer, 1974 dealt with Response Bias?
Experiment 2 and showed we should reject response bias because they recalled events that never occurred
What are examples of misinformation effect
- repeated questioning: enhance recall of details and induce forgetting of others not brought up in questions
- repeated exposure to misinformation strengthens the memory of misinformation
- impacts memory even when participants are informed that it will ("I feel just like Jennifer")
Aim of Loftus, Miller and Burns, 1978
investigate whether verbal post-event information can also be seen in visual recognition tasks
Method and Design Loftus, Miller and Burns, 1978
Experiment using independent measures (2x2 experiment)
Results of Loftus, Miller and Burns, 1978
41% accuracy with inconsistent, 75% with consistent
Inconsistent worsens over time
Aim of McCloskey and Zaragoza, 1985
change in memory is due to response bias
How did McCloskey and Zaragoza, 1985 collect data?
Forced Choice test after slides and narrative
Conclusion of McCloskey and Zaragoza, 1985
Original memory is not distorted but forgotten and they were remembering the narrative, not the pictures
When misleading information is not an option, they perform just as well
Criticisms of Eyewitness Memory Research
Lack ecological validity: conducted in a lab with university students
Lab research is not easily generalized because they can't duplicate extremely stressful eyewitness accounts
What other factors may impact the accuracy of eyewitness memory?
Flashbulb memories: emotion's impact on memory
Biology
Bias
Which part of LeDoux's two pathway theory involves the cerebral cortex (higher thinking)?
Long Pathway