Remembering remotely:would video-mediation impair witnesses' memory reports?


Autoria(s): Nash, Robert A.; Houston, Kate A.; Ryan, Kate; Woodger, Nigel
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Witnesses often experience lengthy delays prior to being interviewed, during which their memories inevitably decay. Video-communication technology - favored by intergovernmental organizations for playing larger roles in judicial processes - might circumvent some of the resourcing problems that can exacerbate such delays. However, whereas video-mediation might facilitate expeditious interviewing, it might also harm rapport-building, make witnesses uncomfortable, and thereby undermine the quality and detail of their reports. Participants viewed a crime film and were interviewed either one day later via video-link, one day later face-to-face, or 1-2 weeks later face-to-face. Video-mediation neither influenced the detail or the accuracy of participants' reports, nor their ratings of the quality of the interviews. However, participants who underwent video-mediated interviews after a short delay gave more accurate, detailed reports than participants who waited longer to be interviewed face-to-face. This study provides initial empirical evidence that video-mediated communication (VMC) could facilitate the expeditious conduct of high-quality investigative interviews. © 2013 © 2013 Taylor & Francis.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/25455/1/Video_mediation_impair_witnesses_memory_reports.pdf

Nash, Robert A.; Houston, Kate A.; Ryan, Kate and Woodger, Nigel (2014). Remembering remotely:would video-mediation impair witnesses' memory reports? Psychology, Crime and Law, 20 (8), pp. 756-768.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/25455/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed