When Believing Is Seeing: The Effect of Scripts on Eyewitness Memory
Abstract
Two studies examined the conditions under which event schema or scripts produce gap-filling errors in eyewitness accounts of a robbery. In Study 1, scripts for the robbery of a convenience store were identified. Results revealed high agreement among the 120 participants concerning the sequence of actions for such a robbery. Based on the information obtained in Study 1, participants in Study 2 (N = 144) viewed one of two sequences of slides depicting a robbery of a convenience store by a lone robber. In one sequence, three central script actions were omitted and in the other, three peripheral script actions were omitted. In addition, rate of exposure was varied (2 vs. 8 sec) as was the length of the retention interval (5 min vs. 1 week). As predicted, there was a higher rate of false recognition for central as opposed to peripheral actions, and this tendency was exaggerated for the longer retention interval...