Factors affecting EWT: anxiety

    Cards (17)

    • Anxiety
      Negative effect on accuracy of eyewitness testimony
    • Weapon-focus effect
      Decreased ability to give an accurate description for one perpetrator of a crime by an eyewitness because of attention to a weapon present during that crime
    • Weapon-focus study (Johnson and Scot)
      1. Group 1: Low anxiety condition - participants sat in a waiting room, overheard a casual conversation, then saw a man walk past
      2. Group 2: High anxiety condition - participants sat in a waiting room, overheard an argument followed by the sound of breaking glass, then saw a man holding a knife covered in blood
    • 49% of group 1 accurately identified the man, compared to 23% of group 2
    • Tunnel theory of memory
      People have enhanced memories of central details (e.g. weapon) but can't remember peripheral details (e.g. the man's face)
    • The weapon-focus effect decreases the accuracy of eyewitness memory
    • Experimental method
      • High internal validity
      • Controlled independent variables
      • Establish cause and effect
      • Standardised procedure
      • Replicated
    • Experimental design
      • Independent groups
      • Controls for individual differences
      • No order effects
    • Quantitative data has limitations in explaining human behaviour in depth
    • Real world applications: Court cases need to consider how anxiety negatively impacts the accuracy of memory and can lead to false identifications/interactions
    • Increased anxiety
      Improved memory accuracy in real-world situations
    • Yuille & Cutshall (1986) study
      1. Interviewed 21 witnesses 4-5 months after an actual shooting incident
      2. Compared accuracy of details between initial police interviews and later interviews
      3. The more stressed witnesses were, the more accurate their accounts (88% accuracy for most stressed vs 75% for least stressed)
    • Anxiety does not have a detrimental effect on memory in real world situations, it may even enhance it
    • Support for negative effects
      Valentine + Mesout found that anxiety can affect eyewitness testimony, measured by heart rate, in a London Dungeon study. This shows heightened anxiety can harm recall of details about the actor.
    • Unusualness not anxiety
      Elizabeth Pickel's study shows the weapon focus effect is due to unusualness, not anxiety. Unusual items like a handgun or raw chicken impair memory.
    • Support for positive effects
      Anxiety can enhance recall. Christianson and Hubinette found 75% accuracy in bank robbery witnesses, higher among those directly involved.
    • Counterpoint
      Christianson and Hubinette's delayed interviews may have overwhelmed anxiety effects, decreasing eyewitness testimony accuracy and invalidating the findings.
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