Authors
Lorraine Hope, David Blocksidge, Fiona Gabbert, James D Sauer, William Lewinski, Arta Mirashi, Emel Atuk
Publication date
2016/2
Journal
Law and human behavior
Volume
40
Issue
1
Pages
23
Publisher
Educational Publishing Foundation
Description
Investigations after critical events often depend on accurate and detailed recall accounts from operational witnesses (eg, law enforcement officers, military personnel, and emergency responders). However, the challenging, and often stressful, nature of such events, together with the cognitive demands imposed on operational witnesses as a function of their active role, may impair subsequent recall. We compared the recall performance of operational active witnesses with that of nonoperational observer witnesses for a challenging simulated scenario involving an armed perpetrator. Seventy-six police officers participated in pairs. In each pair, 1 officer (active witness) was armed and instructed to respond to the scenario as they would in an operational setting, while the other (observer witness) was instructed to simply observe the scenario. All officers then completed free reports and responded to closed questions …
Total citations
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