Facilitating recall and particularisation of repeated events in adults using a multi-method interviewing format

Feni Kontogianni*, Eva Rubinova, Lorraine Hope, Paul J. Taylor, Aldert Vrij, Fiona Gabbert

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)
4 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Reports about repeated experiences tend to include more schematic information than information about specific instances. However, investigators in both forensic and intelligence settings typically seek specific over general information. We tested a multi-method interviewing format (MMIF) to facilitate recall and particularisation of repeated events through the use of the self-generated cues mnemonic, the timeline technique, and follow-up questions. Over separate sessions, 150 adult participants watched four scripted films depicting a series of meetings in which a terrorist group planned attacks and planted explosive devices. For half of our sample, the third witnessed event included two deviations (one new detail and one changed detail). A week later, participants provided their account using the MMIF, the timeline technique with self-generated cues, or a free recall format followed by open-ended questions. As expected, more information was reported overall in the MMIF condition compared to the other format conditions, for two types of details, correct details, and correct gist details. The reporting of internal intrusions was comparable across format conditions. Contrary to hypotheses, the presence of deviations did not benefit recall or source monitoring. Our findings have implications for information elicitation in applied settings and for future research on adults’ retrieval of repeated events.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)471-485
Number of pages15
JournalMemory
Volume29
Issue number4
Early online date24 Mar 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was funded by the Centre of Research and Evidence on Security Threats (ESRC Award: ES/N009614/1) and the University of Portsmouth as a postgraduate bursary for the doctoral work of the first author; Economic and Social Research Council. This work was funded by the Centre of Research and Evidence on Security Threats (ESRC Award: ES/N009614/1) and the University of Portsmouth as a postgraduate bursary for the doctoral work of the first author.

Acknowledgements
This work was funded by the Centre of Research and Evidence on Security Threats (ESRC Award: ES/N009614/1) and the University of Portsmouth as a postgraduate bursary for the doctoral work of the first author.

Keywords

  • deviation
  • memory retrieval
  • Repeated events
  • self-generated cues
  • timeline technique

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