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Loftus and Palmer Leading Questions Context • Carmichael et al. (1932)- presenting participants with identical figures but different accompanying words influenced the way they reproduced images. ▫ E.g. Participants are given an image and a word from list 1 or 2. They then reproduced it. Reproduction Label list 1 Eyeglasses Original Label list 2 Reproduction Dumbbells ▫ Memory is reconstructed which can be affected by verbal labels. Aim • To test 2 effects of leading questions. ▫ Whether using different verbs suggesting a more or less serious accident influenced… estimates of speed. Recall of damage caused in the accident. Procedure- Experiment 1 • Sample: 45 students. • Method: Variously sized groups watched 7 short film clips of accidents. • Measure/ DV: Questionnaire which asked them to describe the accident. They were then asked a series of questions including the critical question on speed. ▫ Filler questions were used to disguise the aim of the experiment. • IV: Verb used Procedure- Experiment 1 cont. ▫ About how fast were the cars going when they [insert verb] each other? Smashed Collided Bumped Hit Contacted Less Severe to More Severe Procedure- Experiment 2 • Sample: 150 students • Method: Variously sized groups were shown a short clip of a multiple car accident. • IV: Grouped… ▫ Control: No critical question ▫ Group 1: Smashed ▫ Group 2: Hit • Measure/ DV: ▫ Immediately following the film- questionnaire which asked them to describe the accident. Series of questions including the critical question. ▫ 1 week later- another questionnaire given to all participants including a new critical question. Did you see any broken glass? Findings- Experiment 1 • Verbs which suggested greater speed and impact produced significantly higher estimates of speed. Verb Speed Smashed 40.8 Collided 39.3 Bumped 38.1 Hit 34.0 Contacted 31.8 Findings- Experiment 2 • The ‘smashed’ group (10.4 mph) gave on average a higher estimate of speed than the ‘hit’ group (8mph). • Participants were more likely to report seeing broken glass in the ‘smashed’ condition. • Participants who estimated higher speeds are more likely to have reported seeing broken glass. Conclusions • The form of a question can systematically effect a witness’s answer. • Experiment 1 shows that an individual who is uncertain of the speed can be influenced by response bias. A more dangerous sounding verb would elicit a higher estimate. • Experiment 2 shows that the form of a question can alter the witness’s mental representation of an event, causing false recall. • Memory of a complex event is an integration of: ▫ Perception of the original event ▫ Subsequent additional external information Evaluation- Strengths • Lab experiment: highly controlled. ▫ Eliminates extraneous variables, e.g. time allowed to encode, and delay prior to recall. ▫ Minimised demand characteristics Randomisation of order of film clips in Exp 1, and position of critical question in Exp 2. Filler questions. ▫ Increased validity and reliability. • Ecological validity ▫ Real clips of car accidents and delay in questioning reflects the experiences of eyewitnesses in court. Evaluation- Weaknesses • Lower ecological validity- witnessing a real car crash: ▫ increased motivation ▫ greater emotional affects ▫ occur in context (films were very short) • Sample- Unrepresentative. ▫ Can we generalise from students to all age groups and demographics? ▫ Less experience of driving? Test Yourself… How good an eyewitness are you? ▫ Follow the link to find out: http://www.youramazingbrain.org/asp/eyeanswe r4.asp Past Exam Questions Section A 1. Summarise the aims and context of Loftus and Palmer’s (1974) research ‘Reconstruction of Automobile Destruction: An Example of the Interaction Between Language and Memory’. [12] 2011 2. Describe the findings and conclusions of Loftus & Palmer’s (1974) research ‘Reconstruction of Automobile Destruction: An Example of the Interaction Between Language and Memory’. [12] 2009 Section B 1. Evaluate the methodology of Loftus and Palmer’s (1974) research ‘Reconstruction of Automobile Destruction: An Example of the Interaction Between Language and Memory’. [12] 2010 2. Evaluate Loftus & Palmer’s (1974) research ‘Reconstruction of automobile destruction: an example of the interaction between language and memory’. [12] 2009 Revision Aids • Check out this link for quizzes and a summary of Loftus and Palmer’s experiment: http://www.holah.co.uk/summary/loftus/