CRI1103 Lecture Notes - Eyewitness Testimony, Feather Duster, Flashbulb Memory

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19 Jun 2018
Department
Course
Professor
CRI1105
Psychology and Criminal Justice
Eyewitness testimony I
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Last week
Unit plan
Unit texts, Study schedule, Assessments
Learning catalytics
Pilot
Blackboard
Announcements, Classes, Readings, Assessments, Discussion board
Essay information
Marking rubric, Title, Key authors, Structure, Format guidelines, Cover sheet
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This week
Eyewitness testimony
Reconstructive nature of memory
Attributional biases
Estimator and system variables
Age, Sex, Race, Illumination, Duration, Delay and Emotional arousal
Post-event information
Self-administered cognitive interview
Co-witness discussion exercise
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Document Summary

Last week: unit plan, unit texts, study schedule, assessments, learning catalytics, pilot, blackboard, announcements, classes, readings, assessments, discussion board, essay information, marking rubric, title, key authors, structure, format guidelines, cover sheet. This week: eyewitness testimony, reconstructive nature of memory, attributional biases, estimator and system variables, age, sex, race, illumination, duration, delay and emotional arousal, post-event information, self-administered cognitive interview, co-witness discussion exercise. Eyewitness testimony: eyewitness testimony is extremely persuasive, eyewitness testimony is extremely unreliable. Double failure: guilty person free to commit further crimes. Reliability: the ability of a witness to consistently identify the person of interest as the perpetrator of the crime. Validity: the ability of a witness to make an identification on the basis of their memory of the perpetrator of the crime. Schemas: cognitive systems that help organise and make sense of information. Bartlett (1932: presented english participants with a variety of materials from different cultures.