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
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
Real world applications: Court cases need to consider how anxiety negatively impacts the accuracy of memory and can lead to false identifications/interactions
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.