?It is felt that eye witness testimony (EWT) is important in criminal trials, with over 1/3rd?of people believing that one single witness is enough to convict someone in a trial. (Simons and Charles 2011)
Yet this is an over-simplification and psychological research into EWT has shown it is often unreliable.
Misleading information: Leading questions
What is leading question?
This is a question that suggests the desired answer that the person asking it wants
It links to misleading information as it can prompt the responder, in this case the witness, to give incorrect information:?Misleading information
Example: Did the robber have a black jumper and blue trousers on when he robbed the petrol station?
A better question would be ‘What was the robber wearing when he robbed the petrol station?
Research into leading questions
Loftus and Palmer (1974) part 1
They conducted a laboratory experiment that involved 45 participants (Ps) placed into 5 groups of 9 Ps
They then watched 7 films about car accidents and at the end of each were asked a series of questions
One question asked how fast the cars were going when they ______________ into each other
The 5 groups were then given a different verb: Either collided, bumped, hit, contacted or smashed
This was an independent design: They only heard one verb
The average speeds given were then calculated
It was found that the average speed for ‘smashed’ was the highest (40.8 mph) compared to 31.8mph for ‘contacted’
This shows the verb in the question prompts misleading information from the participant
Loftus and Palmer (1974) part 2
They then did a follow-up experiment with 150 students who were shown one film of a car accident
The 5 verbs were used again (smashed/collided/hit/contacted/hit) in an independent design
They were once again asked questions but this time an additional question was added:?‘Did you see the broken glass?’
A week later the students were all re-interviewed and asked what they could recall
The ‘smashed’ condition reported seeing broken glass twice as many times as the hit condition: 16 reported it
There was no broken glass
Loftus argued that the misleading question had actually altered a person’s memory of the event
Evaluation of EWT and misleading information/leading questions
The studies lacked ecological validity: The participants knew it was only an experiment and their answers had no consequences
Watching a film of an event is also very different from watching the actual event in real life
The experiment took over 2 hours to complete so Ps could easily have been bored
The real speeds of the cars were around 20mph so all the averages were too high anyway and in the experiment, participants were not good at estimating speeds
Individual differences could be a factor here: Some of the Ps may not have driven so car speeds would be less known about
Broken glass is part of the schema for a car accident so it may be that the reason for the (false) recall of broken glass in experiment 2
There are ethical implications of the experiment: It could have been psychologically harmful to witness these crashes
Loftus,?in her Red Purse/Brown purse study (1979) shows that certain information (i.e. memorable or very obvious) is very hard to mislead people wit
What does happen to the original memory if it has been replaced?
But it was a well-designed experiment and counter-balancing was used to ensure that order effects were not a problem: The five groups all watched the films in a different order
There are huge practical applications to the study: Used by police and legal representatives to ensure leading questions are not used so as not to bias a witness
Exam Tip
When using the studies to answer questions on leading questions/misleading information, always remember to use the speeds of the cars for the verb. You only need to know two speeds: Smash and contact. Compare them both as they represent the highest and lowest speed estimates. For within reason, ballpark figures are also fine but you need to be in the right area (i.e. 40 mph/32mph).