P- one strength is there is researchsupport for the effectiveness of the CI
EV- A metaanalysis combined data from 55 studies comparing CI with SI, finding that the CI produced more correct information than SI.
EX- There is the claim CI improves accuracy of EWT, which this evidence supports as witnesses are able to recall more correct information
L- So, as accuracy increases, the validity of CI also increases.
evaluation point 2- time consuming
P- one weakness is the CI is timeconsuming.
EV- the CI has 4 stages the interviewer must go through to gain alldetail required this takes time to complete. In addition, a rapport must be established and it requires specialisttraining to carry out this interview type, whic also requires money.
EX- A lack of training and money means it’s unlikely the properversion of CI can be used.
L- This means the benefits of the CI may be older or not present at all.
Evaluation counter argument for point 2
P- However, its been found that using 2 of the 4components is just as effective as using all.
EV- Milne and Bull found the combination of the processes ‘reporteverything’ and ‘mentalreinstatment’ produces the best outcomes.
EX- SO, time doesnt have to be wasted going through all the steps but instead only those two should be used by the police.
L- This improves CI credibility of its effectiveness, and we may also argue that if EWT information is more effective,investigations may not take as long, which saves money in the long run.
evaluation 4- methodology
P- one weakness is one component may be considered unreliable.
EV- The ‘changeperspective’ component requires interviewees to created a mentalpicture of the incident, which may encourage imagination and fictional thinking.
EX- Because people cant imagine what someone else has seen realistically, it creates an issue as interviewees may not know the answer, so may lie.
L- So, this stage may be unreliable and interviewees may be subject to social desirability bias if they are not confident in their answer.
Introduction- why was CI introduced?
fisher and geiselman created the cognitive interview in an aim to improveeyewitnesstestimonies by basing techniques on how memoryworks
What are the four key components of a cognitive interview
mental reinstatement
Reporteverything
Change the order
Change the perspective
Explain mental reinstatement
Mental reinstatement refers to the interviewer encouraging the interviewer to recreate both the physical and psychologicalenvironment of the event. Doing this can make memories more accessible, as emotions or context can act as cues for recall.
Explain report everything
Report everything refers to encouraging the interviewee to reporteverydetail, despite it seeming irrelevant. It’s important to do this as it may build a more completeidea by piecingtogetherdetails
Change the order
The interviewer asks the interviewee for alternativetimelines Of the event
Doing this would disrupt the schema, so actual details are focussed on
change the perspective
interviewer asks interviewee to recallevents from another’sPOV who was also present at the event.
doing this would disrupt the schema, and would avoidbias.