EWT:anxiety

Cards (9)

  • Anxiety- EWT-
    Anxiety prevents us from paying attention to the important cues, limiting the recollection of memories.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    Johnson and Scott (1967)-
    • Saw a man walk past with a pen in his hands covered in grease; low anxiety condition.
    • Saw a man walk past with a bloody knife after hearing an argument and glass smash; high anxiety condition.
    • Participants had to pick out the man out from 50 photos – 49% identified the pen man, 33% identified the knife man.
    • Tunnel theory of memory makes people have enhanced memory of central events; weapon focuses can have this effect due to the anxiety.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    Johnson and Scott (1967)-
    • Field experiment (in a natural environment).
    • Independent groups (exposed to different conditions).
    • Participants sat in a waiting room (low anxiety) and told they were taking part n a lab experiment.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    Positive effect on anxiety-
    • The interviews were compared to the original police interviews from the event, where accuracy was determined by the number of correct details they gave.
    • Asked how stressed they felt at the scene on an 8-point scale.
    • Reposted on any emotional/disturbance issues.
    • Found little changes in the interviews but some details were less accurate (colour/weight/height of items).
    • The highest stress gave the most accurate interview of 88%.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    Positive effect on anxiety-
    • Creates physiological arousal/fight or flight increasing alertness possibly increasing awareness.
    • Yuille and Cutshall (1986) did an experiment with an actual shooting in a gun shop in Vancouver Canada.
    • The shop owner shot and killed a thief.
    • 21 witnesses and 13 in the study where they were interviewed 4-5 months after the event.
  • anxiety- EWT-
    • There is both positive and negative findings of the study on anxiety how by Yerkes-Dodson Law (1908)
    • weak performance with low arousal, results in fatigue
    • Strong performance with mid arousal, results in optimum arousal
    • weak performance with high arousal, results in stress and anxiety.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    • Deffenbacher (1983) reviewed 21 studies using their law.
    • When witnessing a crime people became emotionally and physiologically aroused (anxiety and fight or flight).
    • Lower arousals give lower anxiety and lower rates of recall accuracy, higher levels give higher recollection accuracy.
    • The optimum arousal gives the maximum recollection accuracy, but with more the recall declines a lot.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    CPS- Christianson and Hübinette (1993) had 58 witness bank robberies in Sweden (so were workers and some bystanders) – 75% accuracy, direct victims most accurate – anxiety doesn’t reduce accuracy.
    CPW- Interviewed 15 months after the robbery, having no control on discussion – no control over confounding variables.
  • Anxiety- EWT-
    S- Valentine and Mesout (2009) measured heart rates while participants were in high or low anxiety conditions – anxiety disrupted the recall details.
    W- Pickle (1998) used scissors, handgun, wallet or raw chicken in a salon video (scissors high anxiety but usual) – high accuracy for the chicken and gun due to unusualness.