The effects of co-witness discussion on confidence and precision in eyewitness memory reports

Date

2018-03-13

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0965-8211

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Abstract

We examined the influence of co-witness discussion on the metacognitive regulation of memory reports. Participants (N = 92) watched a crime video. Later, a confederate confidently agreed with (gave confirming feedback), disagreed with (gave disconfirming feedback), or gave no feedback (control) regarding participants’ answers to questions about the video. Participants who received disconfirming feedback reported fewer fine-grain details than participants in the confirming and control conditions on a subsequent, individual recall test for a different question set. Unexpectedly, this decrease in fine-grain reporting was not accompanied by a decrease in participants’ confidence in the accuracy of their fine-grain responses. These results indicate that receiving social comparative feedback about one’s memory performance can affect rememberers’ metamemorial control decisions, and potentially decrease the level of detail they volunteer in later memory reports. Further research is needed to assess whether these results replicate under different experimental conditions, and to explore the effects of social influences on metamemory.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Metacognition, Eyewitness memory, Social influence, Co-witness discussion, Memory reporting

Citation

Rechdan, J., Hope, L., Sauer, J., Sauerland, M., Ost, J., Merckelbach, H. (2018) The effects of co-witness discussion on confidence and precision in eyewitness memory reports. Memory, 26(7),

Rights

Research Institute