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How do we ...


remember events?


How do we remember events that we have witnessed, such as a car accident or a crime? Does the brain work like a video recorder? Or do we reconstruct the events each time we talk about them?


In 1974, two researchers called Loftus and Palmer wanted to find out whether leading questions change an eyewitness’s recall. A leading question is one which leads a person to give a particular answer. For example, Was the car travelling above the speed limit? is a leading question because it contains the idea that the driver was speeding. How fast was the car travelling? is not a leading question. Generally speaking, leading questions of this kind are not allowed in a law court. However, Loftus and Palmer believed even small changes in the wording of questions can change memory.


Loftus and Palmer showed 45 students a film of a car accident. After the film, the participants were given a questionnaire which asked them questions about the accident. The participants were split into five groups and each group was given a different questionnaire. All the questions were about the accident, e.g., Was there any broken glass? The questions for all five groups were the same except for one. This question had the same beginning in each case: How fast were the cars going …However, the ending was different for each group. One group had … when they hit each other, another had … when they smashed into each other, and a third group had … when they collided with… . The final versions were bumped into or contacted.


Loftus and Palmer found the estimates of speed differed from group to group. The highest estimate was given by the group with the word smashed, who averaged 41 mph. Contacted had the lowest speed estimate, with an average of only 32 mph. There were other differences, too. The group which had smashed said there was broken glass, when in fact there was none.


They concluded that the words which are used to question an eye-witness affect the person’s recall. This is clearly a very important matter for eye-witness testimony in the case of a serious accident or crime.


Theme 1: Portfolio 39


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