COGNITIVE INTERVIEW

Cards (41)

  • WHO DEVELOPED THE COGNITIVE INTERVIEW?
    Fisher and Geiselman
  • WHY WERE COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS DEVELOPED?
    to improve EWT testimony
  • FOUR MAIN STEPS OF COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS?
    1. Report everything
    2. Reinstate the context
    3. Change the order
    4. Change the perspective
  • WHAT TAKES PLACE WHEN THE WITNESS REPORTS EVERYTHING?
    witness encouraged to recall every single thing that happened during the event even if irrelevant
  • WHAT TAKES PLACE WHEN THE WITNESS REINSTATES THE CONTEXT?
    witness mentally recreates the surroundings and personal context of the event (sights, sounds, weather, emotions)
  • WHAT TAKES PLACE WHEN THE WITNESS CHANGES THE ORDER?
    alternative method of recalling (e.g. starts with final point before working way back to beginning)
  • WHAT TAKES PLACE WHEN THE WITNESS CHANGES THE PERSPECTIVE?
    witness recalls event from another person's point of view describing what they would have seen
  • WHY DOES REPORTING EVERYTHING IMPROVE THE ACCURACY OF EWT?
    • avoids response bias from specific questions
    • enables trivial details to potentially trigger other memories
  • WHY DOES REINSTATING THE CONTEXT IMPROVE THE ACCURACY OF EWT?
    prevents retrieval failure as imaging the environment and emotions can trigger cues
  • WHY DOES CHANGING THE ORDER/ PERSPECTIVE IMPROVE THE ACCURACY OF EWT?
    disrupts effect of expectations and schema on recall
  • WHAT OTHER SOCIAL ASPECTS ARE DONE BY THE INTERVIEWER IN THE ENHANCED VERSION OF THE COGNITIVE INTERVIEW?
    • encourage witness to relax
    • speak slowly
    • helps witness clarify statement
    • adapts questions to suit understanding of individual witnesses
  • WHAT CAN IMPROVE MEMORY IN A COGNITIVE INTERVIEW?
    retrieval cues
  • WHAT ARE COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS BASED ON THE IDEA OF?
    there are many retrieval paths to memory
  • WHAT IS THE WITNESS GIVEN IN A COGNITIVE INTERVIEW?
    time to recall
  • WHAT IS THE WITNESSES ENCOURAGED TO DO AND HOW IN A COGNITIVE INTERVIEW?
    recreate original context using open questions
  • WHAT SHOULD THE INTERVIEW TECHNIQUE IN COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS DO?
    maximise amount of recalled detail (is based on psychological research)
  • WHAT OFTEN HAPPENS IN A STANDARD INTERVIEW?
    • interrupted which can break concentration
    • bombarded with brief questions to elicit facts
  • WHAT TYPE OF QUESTIONS ARE ASKED IN A STANDARD INTERVIEW?
    closed questions
  • WHAT DOES THE STANDARD INTERVIEW TECHNIQUE FAIL TO DO?
    maximise recall (not based on psychological research)
  • WHAT TYPE OF ANSWERS ARE USUALLY GIVEN IN A STANDARD INTERVIEW BY THE WITNESS?
    short answers
  • RESEARCH SUPPORT?
    • Kohnken
    • Mello and Fisher
  • KOHNKEN RESEARCH METHOD USED?
    meta-analysis
  • PROCEDURE OF KOHNKENS EXPERIMENT?
    analysed 50 studies that compared standard and cognitive interviews
  • FINDINGS OF KOHNKENS STUDY?
    81% increase in correct information recalled with cognitive interviews compared to standard interviews
  • CONCLUSION OF KOHNKENS STUDY?
    indicates CI is effective at improving the accuracy of EWT and there are real practical benefits to the police from using CI
  • OTHER FINDINGS OF KOHNKENS STUDY?
    61% increase in incorrect information with CI compared to SI, which may waste time as detectives will have to distinguish between a vast amount of accurate and inaccurate information
  • RESEARCH METHOD OF MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    laboratory experiment
  • HOW MANY PARTICIPANTS WERE THERE IN MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    50
  • TWO CONDITIONS OF MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    30 older (average age of 72), 20 younger (average age of 22)
  • WHAT OCCURED IN MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    shown film of a crime and interviewed in either a SI/CI
  • FINDINGS OF MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    CI generated more accurate information than SI for both groups, but effect was greater for older participants
  • CONCLUSION OF MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    CI is an effective method for improving accuracy of EWT especially in older witnesses
  • REAL WORLD APPLICATION OF MELLO AND FISHERS EXPERIMENT?
    • negative stereotypes of older people struggling to remember
    • older witnesses can be overly cautious when reporting information
    • CI can overcome this problem
    • give older witnesses confidence in reporting accurate testimonies
  • STRENGTHS OF COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS?
    research support
  • WEAKNESSES OF COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS?
    • time consuming
    • requires specialist training (expensive)
    • overcomplicated
    • complexity
  • WHO PROVIDED EVIDENCE TO SUGGEST THE COGNITIVE INTERVIEW IS TOO OVERCOMPLICATED?
    Milne and Bull
  • WHAT DID MILNE AND BULL DISCOVER?
    some elements of CI more useful than others, and not all are required to improve EWT
  • WHAT DOES THE COMPLEXITY OF CI CAUSE?
    difficult to use on children as their cognitive function is not as sophisticated
  • WHO PROVIDED EVIDENCE THAT CI IS STILL USEFUL ON CHILDREN?
    Holliday
  • WHAT DID HOLLIDAY DISCOVER?
    CI gained more accurate details from children aged 5 to 9 who had witnessed a video of a birthday party than a SI