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                                       Details for article 84 of 105 found articles
 
 
  The effects of pressure to report more details on memories of an eyewitness event
 
 
Title: The effects of pressure to report more details on memories of an eyewitness event
Author: Winningham, Robert G.
Weaver, Charles A.
Appeared in: European journal of cognitive psychology
Paging: Volume 12 (2000) nr. 2 pages 271-282
Year: 2000-06-01
Contents: The confidence with which an eyewitness recalls a memory is positively correlated with the likelihood that the jurors will believe that memory. In addition, the United States judiciary recognises confidence as a key factor in determining the accuracy of eyewitness reports. Although the effects of type of questioning on the accuracy of eyewitness memories are fairly well known, little is known about the effect of questioning on subjective confidence - or the relationship between confidence and accuracy. Participants in the present study witnessed a staged even and were questioned up to five times about that event. Some participants were pressured to report more details, whereas others were not. Results of this paper are powerful and clear; pressuring participants to report more details increased the number of accurate and inaccurate statements. However, pressuring participants to report more details did not change the predictive accuracy of their confidence judgements.
Publisher: Psychology Press
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 84 of 105 found articles
 
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