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Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory. / Dando, Coral J.; Ormerod, Thomas C.
Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. ed. / Niels Taatgen; Hedderik van Rijn. 2009. p. 2644-2649.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Dando, CJ & Ormerod, TC 2009, Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory. in N Taatgen & H van Rijn (eds), Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. pp. 2644-2649.

APA

Dando, C. J., & Ormerod, T. C. (2009). Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory. In N. Taatgen, & H. van Rijn (Eds.), Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 2644-2649)

Vancouver

Dando CJ, Ormerod TC. Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory. In Taatgen N, van Rijn H, editors, Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. 2009. p. 2644-2649

Author

Dando, Coral J. ; Ormerod, Thomas C. / Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory. Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. editor / Niels Taatgen ; Hedderik van Rijn. 2009. pp. 2644-2649

Bibtex

@inbook{3a76a1dba70740f0a85bae973cab0e01,
title = "Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory.",
abstract = "An experimental study is reported of the retrieval by mock eyewitnesses of a scripted video crime event, comparing free recall against Change Temporal Order (CTO) recall, in which event retrieval is prompted in reverse order. Contrary to proponents of the technique who suggest that CTO allows greater discovery of script incidental information and increases the amount of information recalled, CTO was found to impair retrieval, leading to fewer script consistent events, reduced recall of correct information,increased confabulations, and lowered accuracy proportional to items retrieved. The disruptive effects of CTO are interpreted as providing further evidence for the role of temporal clustering highlighted in the CMR model of memory. Impairment induced by the CTO technique continued to influence retrieval negatively even during a secondary free recall phase. We suggest that CTO prevents the blocking of confabulations, and that these confabulations may subsequently contribute to forgetting by population dilution",
keywords = "Memory retrieval, Scripts, Eyewitness testimony, Cognitive Interview, Temporal clustering, Population dilution.",
author = "Dando, {Coral J.} and Ormerod, {Thomas C.}",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-9768318-5-3",
pages = "2644--2649",
editor = "Niels Taatgen and {van Rijn}, Hedderik",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Effects of the change temporal order technique on eyewitness memory.

AU - Dando, Coral J.

AU - Ormerod, Thomas C.

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - An experimental study is reported of the retrieval by mock eyewitnesses of a scripted video crime event, comparing free recall against Change Temporal Order (CTO) recall, in which event retrieval is prompted in reverse order. Contrary to proponents of the technique who suggest that CTO allows greater discovery of script incidental information and increases the amount of information recalled, CTO was found to impair retrieval, leading to fewer script consistent events, reduced recall of correct information,increased confabulations, and lowered accuracy proportional to items retrieved. The disruptive effects of CTO are interpreted as providing further evidence for the role of temporal clustering highlighted in the CMR model of memory. Impairment induced by the CTO technique continued to influence retrieval negatively even during a secondary free recall phase. We suggest that CTO prevents the blocking of confabulations, and that these confabulations may subsequently contribute to forgetting by population dilution

AB - An experimental study is reported of the retrieval by mock eyewitnesses of a scripted video crime event, comparing free recall against Change Temporal Order (CTO) recall, in which event retrieval is prompted in reverse order. Contrary to proponents of the technique who suggest that CTO allows greater discovery of script incidental information and increases the amount of information recalled, CTO was found to impair retrieval, leading to fewer script consistent events, reduced recall of correct information,increased confabulations, and lowered accuracy proportional to items retrieved. The disruptive effects of CTO are interpreted as providing further evidence for the role of temporal clustering highlighted in the CMR model of memory. Impairment induced by the CTO technique continued to influence retrieval negatively even during a secondary free recall phase. We suggest that CTO prevents the blocking of confabulations, and that these confabulations may subsequently contribute to forgetting by population dilution

KW - Memory retrieval

KW - Scripts

KW - Eyewitness testimony

KW - Cognitive Interview

KW - Temporal clustering

KW - Population dilution.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-0-9768318-5-3

SP - 2644

EP - 2649

BT - Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society

A2 - Taatgen, Niels

A2 - van Rijn, Hedderik

ER -