Are multiple-trial experiments appropriate for eyewitness identification studies? Accuracy, choosing, and confidence across trials

J. K. Mansour, J. L. Beaudry, R. C.L. Lindsay

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Citations (Scopus)
37 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Eyewitness identification experiments typically involve a single trial: A participant views an event and subsequently makes a lineup decision. As compared to this single-trial paradigm, multiple-trial designs are more efficient, but significantly reduce ecological validity and may affect the strategies that participants use to make lineup decisions. We examined the effects of a number of forensically relevant variables (i.e., memory strength, type of disguise, degree of disguise, and lineup type) on eyewitness accuracy, choosing, and confidence across 12 target-present and 12 target-absent lineup trials (N = 349; 8,376 lineup decisions). The rates of correct rejections and choosing (across both target-present and target-absent lineups) did not vary across the 24 trials, as reflected by main effects or interactions with trial number. Trial number had a significant but trivial quadratic effect on correct identifications (OR = 0.99) and interacted significantly, but again trivially, with disguise type (OR = 1.00). Trial number did not significantly influence participants’ confidence in correct identifications, confidence in correct rejections, or confidence in target-absent selections. Thus, multiple-trial designs appear to have minimal effects on eyewitness accuracy, choosing, and confidence. Researchers should thus consider using multiple-trial designs for conducting eyewitness identification experiments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2235-2254
Number of pages20
JournalBehavior Research Methods
Volume49
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Eyewitness confidence
  • Eyewitness identification
  • Multilevel modelling
  • Multiple trials
  • Simultaneous and sequential lineups

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