The Effect of Wanted Posters on Prospective and Retrospective Memory

The experiment tested prospective and retrospective memory for a person pictured on a wanted poster. Participants monitored the videotaped activity of a computer lab; one of their duties involved reporting if they saw a computer hacker. Half viewed a wanted poster of the hacker before the monitoring...

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Veröffentlicht in:Law and human behavior 2011-04, Vol.35 (2), p.104-109
Hauptverfasser: McAllister, Hunter A, Baiamonte, Brandon A, Ory, Justin H, Scherer, Joseph A
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The experiment tested prospective and retrospective memory for a person pictured on a wanted poster. Participants monitored the videotaped activity of a computer lab; one of their duties involved reporting if they saw a computer hacker. Half viewed a wanted poster of the hacker before the monitoring task and half after. For half the participants, the hacker appeared during monitoring and for half not. A diagnosticity ratio comparing the correct prospective memory identifications with false positive identifications showed that a prospective identification was 3.35 times more likely to be accurate than inaccurate. For those viewing the wanted poster after monitoring, the diagnosticity ratio was 1.21. Based on diagnosticity, a prospective identification had more value than a retrospective identification.
ISSN:0147-7307
1573-661X
DOI:10.1007/s10979-010-9224-6