1986
DOI: 10.2307/1422492
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Enhancement of Eyewitness Memory with the Cognitive Interview

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Cited by 326 publications
(409 citation statements)
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“…One reason for the effectiveness of the CI in obtaining a description of an event or a face is that recall is fragmentary in nature and more complete accounts are obtained with multiple recall attempts and subsequent prompting (e.g. Geiselman et al, 1986). With facial composites, better recall is of assistance in locating individual facial features within a composite system.…”
Section: Advantages Of the H-cimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One reason for the effectiveness of the CI in obtaining a description of an event or a face is that recall is fragmentary in nature and more complete accounts are obtained with multiple recall attempts and subsequent prompting (e.g. Geiselman et al, 1986). With facial composites, better recall is of assistance in locating individual facial features within a composite system.…”
Section: Advantages Of the H-cimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, exposure to context information 24 h prior to an interview can have the same beneficial effects as exposure to the context during the interview (Priestley et al, 1999). Mental context reinstatement has also been studied as a key component of the CI that was developed in the early 1980s in an attempt to improve the quality of police interviews with adult witnesses (Geiselman et al, 1984). The primary aims were to increase both the quantity and the quality of information elicited from cooperative witnesses, victims, and suspects (Geiselman et al, 1984;Geiselman, Fisher, MacKinnon, & Holland, 1985.…”
Section: Probing Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mental context reinstatement has also been studied as a key component of the CI that was developed in the early 1980s in an attempt to improve the quality of police interviews with adult witnesses (Geiselman et al, 1984). The primary aims were to increase both the quantity and the quality of information elicited from cooperative witnesses, victims, and suspects (Geiselman et al, 1984;Geiselman, Fisher, MacKinnon, & Holland, 1985. Since then, the CI has been modified for field settings as well as for children.…”
Section: Probing Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inaccurate or incomplete testimony can lead to wrongful conviction or acquittal (Huff, Rattner, & Sagarin, 1996) and so reliable interviewing techniques are imperative in eliciting the most detailed yet accurate reports from witnesses. The Cognitive Interview (CI) is now one of the most widely used and accepted forms of interviewing in both the US and the UK (Fisher & Geiselman, 1992;Geiselman, 1984), and is currently taught to all police recruits in the UK (Dando & Milne, 2009). The CI has been shown to elicit detailed, yet accurate, reports from adult witnesses (Davis, McMahon & Greenwood, 2005;Kohnken, Milne, Memon & Bull, 1999), children (Geiselman & Padilla, 1988;Memon, Wark, Bull & Koehnken, 1997), older witnesses (Wright & Holliday, 2007b) and witnesses with learning disabilities (referred to in the US as mental retardation) (Milne, Clare & Bull, 1999 The Cognitive Interview (CI) is based on two basic principles of how memory typically operates; that retrieval of an event will be enhanced if the context experienced at recall matches that experienced during encoding (Fisher & Geiselman, 1992;Roediger, Weldon, Challis, & Craik, 1989; Tulving & Thompson, 1973), and that memories are stored as interconnected nodes that provide multiple retrieval routes (Tulving, 1974).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recall of trivial or incomplete details is encouraged ('report all' instruction) since important facts may be elicited that co-occurred with seemingly unimportant events (Geiselman, Fisher, Mackinnon, & Holland, 1986). CR is followed by QU in which…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%