The effect of anxiety on eyewitness testimony

Thesis


Ridley, Anne M 2003. The effect of anxiety on eyewitness testimony. Thesis University of East London
AuthorsRidley, Anne M
Abstract

Anxiety at the time of interview in witnesses to a crime has received scant
attention from researchersin the eyewitnesst estimony field. In this thesis, the effects
of state and trait anxiety on memory accuracy, suggestibility and confidence of
accuracy were investigated. In addition, with respect to suggestibility, the effects of
anxiety at the time of encoding misleading information was evaluated and compared
to the effects of anxiety at the time of its possibler etrieval as a suggestibler esponse.
Five laboratory-based studies were conducted. The first three used a standard
suggestibility paradigm and anxious mood was induced by an experimental
manipulation. The fourth study was a source identification experiment and the fifth
was a line-up recognition study. The fourth and fifth studies both used questionnaire
measures of state anxiety. Questionnaire measures of trait anxiety were used in all
experiments.
Neither state nor trait anxiety was found to affect memory accuracy, measured
by cued-recall in Studies I to 3, nor did anxiety affect correct attributions to source in
Study 4. In Study 5 there was a modest improvement in identification accuracy in the
high state-anxious group, but only when the target was present in the line-up.
Misleading post-event information (MPI) did not lead to suggestibility in Study 5, but
it did affect accuracy.
There was a strong effect of NTI in all other studies with misinformed groups
more suggestible than controls. However, anxiety moderated the effect of MPI, with
high state anxiety (whether experimentally induced or measured by questionnaire)
being associated with reductions in suggestibility. In contrast, trait anxiety was
associated with higher levels of suggestibility, but the effects of state anxiety were
stronger. In Studies I-3 it was found that anxiety at either the encoding or the
retrieval of WI generally resulted in lower levels of suggestibility.
Anxiety affected confidence of memory accuracy, with more accurate
confidence judgements generally observed in low anxious participants. In contrast,
anxiety did not affect confidence in responsesto questionst esting suggestibility.
Overall, the findings indicate that elevated state anxiety at interview does not
adversely affect eyewitness performance and can reduce the negative effects of WI.
Results are discussed in the light of both theories of cognition and emotion, for
example cognitive biases associated with anxiety, and eyewitness testimony research,.
in particular theories of suggestibility.

KeywordsAnxiety; memory accuracy
Year2003
Web address (URL)http://hdl.handle.net/10552/1227
File
File Access Level
Registered users only
Publication dates
Print2003
Publication process dates
Deposited09 May 2011
Additional information

This thesis supplied via ROAR to UEL-registered users is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, and duplication of any part of the material is not permitted, except for your personal use for the purposes of non-commercial research and private study in electronic or print form. You must obtain permission from the copyright-holder for any other use. Electronic or print copies may not be offered, for sale or otherwise, to anyone. No quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement.

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