Self-generated cues: the role of cue quality in facilitating eyewitness recall

Rebecca l. Wheeler-Mundy, Fiona Gabbert, Lorraine Hope

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Abstract

Purpose: Witness-led techniques, informed by theory, have been recognized as best practice for eliciting information from cooperative eyewitnesses. This study aims to test a self-generated cue (SGC) mnemonic grounded in memory theory and explore the impact of three SGC mnemonics on subsequent recall performance.

Design/methodology/approach: Participants (N = 170) witnessed a live staged event and reported their recall using an SGC mnemonic (keywords only, event line or concept map) or control technique (other-generated cues or free recall only). These mock witness accounts were compared in terms of correct and incorrect details reported.

Findings: Fewer correct details were reported in the other-generated cue condition compared to the SGC event line (p = 0.018) and SGC concept map (p = 0.010). There were no significant differences between free recall alone and any other condition. The number of inaccurate details reported did not differ between conditions (p = 0.153). The findings suggest that high-quality free recall instructions can benefit recall performance above generic cues (e.g. other-generated cues) but using SGCs to support a structured recall (e.g. concept map or event line) may offer an additional recall benefit.

Originality/value: The findings support previous research that SGCs benefit recall beyond other-generated cues. However, by comparing different cue generation techniques grounded in the literature, we extend such findings to show that SGC generation techniques are not equally effective and that combining SGCs with structured recall is likely to carry the greatest benefit to recall.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Criminal Psychology
Early online date18 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusEarly online - 18 Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Self-Generated cue
  • Cognitive mnemonic
  • Information elicitation
  • Witness-Led recall
  • Retrieval cue
  • Cue quality

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