Older
adults may be unreliable eyewitnesses
Newswise — A
University of Virginia study suggests that older
adults are not only more inclined than younger
adults to make errors in recollecting details that
have been suggested to them, but are also more
likely than younger people to have a very high level
of confidence in their recollections, even when
wrong.
The finding has implications regarding the
reliability of older persons’ eyewitness testimonies
in courtrooms.
The study, “I
misremember it well: Why older adults are unreliable
eyewitnesses,” is published in a recent issue of the
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
“There are
potentially significant practical implications to
these results as confident but mistaken eyewitness
testimony may be the largest cause of wrongful
convictions in the United States,” said Chad Dodson,
the study’s lead researcher and an assistant
professor of psychology at the University of
Virginia.
“Given that older adults will constitute
an increasing proportion of the U.S. population,
there may be a corresponding increase in the
occurrence of wrongful convictions based on the
testimony of highly confident but mistaken
eyewitnesses.”
Dodson and U.Va.
graduate student Lacy Krueger studied
“suggestibility errors,” instances where people come
to believe that a particular event occurred, when in
fact, the event was merely suggested to them and did
not actually occur.
They found through
a series of experiments that when younger and older
adults were matched on their overall memory for
experienced events, both groups showed comparable
rates of suggestibility errors in which they claimed
to have seen events in a video that had been
suggested in a subsequent questionnaire.
However, older
adults were “alarmingly” likely to commit these
suggestibility errors when they were most confident
about the correctness of their response. Younger
people were more likely to commit these errors when
they were uncertain about the accuracy of their
response.
Previous studies
by other investigators have shown that older adults
are more likely than younger people to “remember”
events that did not occur, and to misremember events
that did occur. The U.Va. study further suggest that
this occurs because older adults are more inclined
to miscombine details of events, which results in a
high degree of confidence that they are remembering
these details accurately.
Participants in
the study were shown a five-minute video clip
reenacting a burglary and police chase. They were
then asked to answer 24 yes/no questions about what
they had witnessed in the video. Eight of those
questions referred to details that never actually
happened in the video, such as suggesting the
presence of a gun when in fact no gun ever appeared
in the video itself.
Prior to
completing the memory test, the participants were
told that some of the test questions would refer to
details that had not actually occurred in the video.
They were asked to indicate for each test question
whether it had occurred in the video only, in the
questionnaire only, or neither. They were also asked
to judge the likely accuracy of their response,
essentially whether they were guessing or certain.
It was here that the confidence level, even when
wrong, was much higher among older adults than
younger adults.
“This finding
suggests that this is not simply a case of poorer
memory among older adults, but that there may be
some other mechanism leading to the high rate of
confidence,” Dodson said. “We believe the high
confidence comes from the detail that they believe
they remember. Because the detail seems sharp, they
are highly confident that they are correct in their
recollection, even when the recollection has been
suggested to them rather than actually witnessed.
This pattern of behavior is particularly worrisome,
given the influence of eyewitness confidence on jury
decision making.”
The older study
participants were 60 to 80 years of age, while the
younger participants were college students. There
were three study groups: the older participants who
all took the questionnaire immediately after seeing
the video, a young group who also took the
questionnaire immediately after seeing the video,
and a group of younger participants who answered the
questionnaire two days after seeing the video to
replicate the memory differences between older and
younger adults.