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Repeated interviewing of witnesses and suspects. Ronald Fisher Florida International University (Miami, U.S.A.) iIIRG (Dundee, Scotlant) June 1, 2011. Accuracy rate per response category (Gilbert & Fisher). Time 1 Time 2 Consistent .95 .95 Forgotten .93 --
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Repeated interviewing of witnesses and suspects Ronald Fisher Florida International University (Miami, U.S.A.) iIIRG(Dundee, Scotlant) June 1, 2011
Accuracy rate per response category(Gilbert & Fisher) Time 1Time 2 Consistent .95 .95 Forgotten .93 -- Reminiscent -- .87 Contradictory .62 .35
Legal Challenges:Judge’s instructions Florida Standard Jury Instructions in Criminal Cases, 1987,# 204, sub-para 8:… “Did the witness at some other time make a statement that is inconsistent with the testimony he gave in court?”
Legal Challenges:Recommended cross-examination Bailey & Rothblatt (1971, p. 177): “Capitalize on these conflicts. This is the most effective way of discrediting [the witness’ s] entire testimony.” Glissan (1991, p.108): “A true inconsistency can effectively destroy a witness, and sometimes a whole case…If you find a true inconsistency, or if you can manufacture one, then use the deposition of previous evidence to sheet it home.”
Poets know best • Ralph Waldo Emerson: • “Foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds.”
Multiple interviewing • Most witnesses are interviewed repeatedly • Relatively little research, however, on multiple interviewing
What do we gain from multiple interviewing? • Opportunity to collect new information • Opportunity to compare responses across interviews
Collect New Information • How often is new information generated on a second interview (not collected on the first): reminiscence? • How accurate is reminiscent information?
Frequency of Reminiscence • Gilbert & Fisher (2006) • Procedure: • See video, T1 (immed), T2 (2 days) • Free Recall or Guided Recall • Results: 189/192 show reminiscence (others: Yuille & Turtle; Gabbert, et al) • Mean number of reminiscences: 8.19 • Reminiscence is common experience
Accuracy of Reminiscence • Accuracy rate of reminiscence .87 • Comparable results reported by others, e.g., LaRooy et al. • Conclusion – repeated testing is very likely to generate new, accurate information – as long as questions are open-ended
Goal • To test the assumption that inconsistency is an indicator of a weak memory or deception. • How valid is this assumption?
Overview • Separate for inferences about memory and deception. • To show that people do rely on inconsistency to infer about memory accuracy and deception. • Q? In fact, is inconsistency a good predictor of memory accuracy and deception? • Sometimes.
Beliefs about Inconsistency • Sign of a weak memory • Sign of deception
People are swayed by these inconsistencies • Surveys: • College Students (Brewer, Potter, Fisher, Bond, & Luszcz, 1999) • Police, prosecutors, & defenders (Potter & Brewer, 1999) • Experimental jury simulations • Berman, Narby, & Cutler (1995) • Brewer & Hupfeld (2004)
Legal Challenges:Recommended cross-examination Bailey & Rothblatt (1971, p. 177): “Capitalize on these conflicts. This is the most effective way of discrediting [the witness’ s] entire testimony.” Glissan (1991, p.108): “A true inconsistency can effectively destroy a witness, and sometimes a whole case…If you find a true inconsistency, or if you can manufacture one, then use the deposition of previous evidence to sheet it home.”
Legal Challenges:Judge’s instructions Florida Standard Jury Instructions in Criminal Cases, 1987,# 204, sub-para 8:… “Did the witness at some other time make a statement that is inconsistent with the testimony he gave in court?”
Attorneys’ vs. Researchers’ Goals • Attorneys : to convince jurors or judges that their side of the argument is correct. • Scientists: to find out the truth and to explain it.
Scientific Research on Inconsistency • Prior to 1970: very few studies • Difficult to conduct (resource demanding) • Memory theories about single recollections • Exceptions (Erdelyi; Payne)
Recent Studies • Naturalistic Studies • Flashbulb memories (e.g., Pezdek) • Holocaust survivors (Wagenaar & Groenweg) • Epidemiological/Health (Fisher, et al) • General Findings: some inconsistency • Limitations: cannot measure accuracy • Need laboratory studies to measure accuracy
“Blended” experiments • 19 Experiments Fisher & Cutler (1996), Brewer et al (1999), Patterson & Fisher (2005); Gilbert & Fisher (2006); Mitchell, Haw, & Fisher (2003); Fisher & Hazel (in preparation) • Method: • Event: videotape or live event • Two tests (T1 & T2): • T1 is immediate or after a few hours • T2 is a few days or one or two weeks later • Test questions: open-ended or closed (cued recall) • T1/T2 cue similarity: same or different, e.g., temporal/temporal (same) or temporal/spatial (diff.)
Witness Recall at Time 1 & Time 2 T1: ….tall, hat, jacket, scar, red hair T2:…..tall, hat, jacket, ……,bald,…. belt Consistent: T1 + T2 Forgetting: T1 only **Contradiction: T1 + T2 different **Reminiscence: T2 only
Measuring Accuracy • Accuracy rate = # correct___ total # responses • Calculate separately for each of the 4 response categories: • Consistent • Reminiscent • Forgotten • Contradictory
Measuring Consistency • Consistenct rate = # consistent__ total # responses • Calculate separately for each of the 4 response categories
Three Corollaries of Belief (Inconsistency = Inaccurate) • Inconsistent statements are inaccurate • Witness who make more inconsistent statements are less accurate • Consistency and accuracy reflect one, common, underlying process
Corollary # 1:Inconsistent statements are inaccurate • To examine accuracy of 4 kinds of statement: • Consistent • Forgotten • Reminiscent • Contradictory
Accuracy rate per response category(Gilbert & Fisher) Time 1Time 2 Consistent .95 .95 Forgotten .93 -- Reminiscent -- .87 Contradictory .62 .35
Conclusion # 1 • Inconsistent statements are less accurate, but we should distinguish between different forms of inconsistency • Reminiscent statements are still generally (.87) • Only contradictory statements are much less accurate (.62 @ T2; and .35 @ T2)
Corollary # 2:Inconsistent witnesses are inaccurate • To examine the correlation between overall consistency and overall accuracy (across witnesses)
Correlations between consistency and overall accuracy(Gilbert & Fisher) • Proportion contradictions: -.17 (non-significant) • Proportion reminiscence: .03 (non-significant) • Similar pattern (small, non-significant correlations) in other experiments
Conclusion # 2 • Inconsistent witnesses are only minimally less accurate than consistent witnesses.
Puzzling Finding • Contradictory statements are much less accurate than consistent statements, but… • inconsistent witnesses are only minimally less accurate than (or the same as) inconsistent witnesses
Solution to puzzle: Items are processed independently • Accuracy of recalling one set of items (e.g., car) does not predict accuracy of recalling another set of items (e.g., perpetrator)
Support for Independence explanation • Examine categories of information (e.g., car, perpetrator, setting). • Examine inter-category correlations. • Across 8 experiments, mean inter-category correlation = .11 (Brewer, et al.1999; Mitchell, Haw & Fisher, 2003)
Implications of Independence for courtroom and investigation • Cannot challenge an entire witness’stestimony, because he/she recalls some items incorrectly. • Can challenge only those individual statements that we believe are incorrect (e.g. contradiction).
Corollary # 3 • Consistency and accuracy reflect one, common underlying process
Test Logic • Do experimental manipulations have the same or different effects on consistency and accuracy? (Experimental dissociation) • Same effects one underlying process Different effects multiple underlying processes
Experimental Results • Some manipulations have the same effects on consistency and accuracy, e.g., question format (open-ended vs. closed) • Some manipulations have different effects on consistency and accuracy, e.g. delay: decreases accuracy but increases consistency
Conclusions • Some common elements -- but almost all measures have some common elements. • Some processes influence one measure but not the other. • Ultimate: Cannot reflexively interpret inconsistency to indicate accuracy
A Framework for Understanding Inconsistency • Something must change from T1 to T2, but what?
Candidates for Change • Mental representation: knowledge base • Retrieval processes: questions, interviewers • Metacognition: monitoring one’s knowledge
Two Approaches • What do people believe? • Is this belief valid? What is the truth?
Beliefs about Inconsistency as an indicator of deception: Real-world assessments • Training agencies • Interrogation manuals • Surveys of police & judges
Beliefs about Inconsistency as an indicator of deception:Laboratory Studies • Self-assessments • Experimental manipulations
Consistency Heuristic • Everyone believes that inconsistent reports are grounds for doubting one’s veracity.
How valid is the “consistency heuristic”? • Scientific, controlled studies • Advantage of scientific, controlled experiments: We know who is, in fact, lying and who is telling the truth.
Scientific Research on Consistency and Deception • Relatively little research • Research is resource-demanding • Multiple testing • Compare answers across tests • Two laboratories: Granhag/Stromwall Vrij/Fisher
Typical Laboratory Study • Truth-tellers engage in an activity; liars do not do the activity, but are asked to convince an interviewer that they did. • Interviewed/Tested twice (Int-1, Int-2) • Interval varies from hours to days • Interviewed individually or in pairs • Compare their answers (consistency) • Within respondents (Int-1 and Int-2) • Across respondents (Resp # 1 and Resp # 2)
Two Patterns of Results • Sometimes liars are as inconsistent (or even less) as truth-tellers (Granhag/Stromwall) • Sometimes liars are more inconsistent than truth-tellers (Vrij/Fisher)