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Original Articles

The cognitive interview: A meta-analysis

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Pages 3-27 | Published online: 04 Jan 2008

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (59)

Amy Hyman Gregory, Andrea Wolfs & Nadja Schreiber Compo. (2023) Witness/victim interviewing: a survey of real-world investigators’ training and practices. Psychology, Crime & Law 29:9, pages 957-981.
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Jennifer Ma, Helen M. Paterson & Misia Temler. (2022) The effects of immediate recall and subsequent retrieval strategy on eyewitness memory. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 29:5, pages 788-805.
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Mohammed M. Ali, Sonja P. Brubacher, Stefanie J. Sharman & Martine B. Powell. (2022) Adult Mock Sexual Assault Witness Perceptions and Non-Verbal Behaviors Across Different Interview Frameworks. Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice 0:0, pages 1-27.
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Laura Fallon, Brent Snook, Todd Barron, Angela Baker, Mike Notte, Jeff Stephenson & Dan Trottier. (2022) Evaluating the Vermont State police’s PEACE model training program: phase 1. Psychology, Crime & Law 28:1, pages 59-81.
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Eric Novotny, Mark G. Frank & Matthew Grizzard. (2021) A Laboratory Study Comparing the Effectiveness of Verbal and Nonverbal Rapport-Building Techniques in Interviews. Communication Studies 72:5, pages 819-833.
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Stephanie Aurora Cardenas, William Crozier & Deryn Strange. (2021) Right place, wrong time: the limitations of mental reinstatement of context on alibi-elicitation. Psychology, Crime & Law 27:3, pages 201-230.
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Kimberley J. Cunial, Leanne M. Casey, Clare Bell & Mark R. Kebbell. (2021) Police perceptions of training in interviewing youth with ADHD. Police Practice and Research 22:1, pages 491-509.
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Franziska Clemens, Melanie Knieps & Serra Tekin. (2020) Untapped Potential? A Survey Study with German Police Officers into Suspect Interviewing Practices and the Strategic Use of Evidence. Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice 20:1, pages 53-79.
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Mohammed M. Ali, Nina J. Westera, Rachel Zajac & Martine Powell. (2019) Australian stakeholders’ views on improving investigative interviews with adult sexual assault complainants. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 26:5, pages 724-739.
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Alexandra E. Mosser & Jacqueline R. Evans. (2019) Increasing the number of contacts generated during contact tracing interviews. Memory 27:4, pages 495-506.
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Kimberley J. Cunial, Leanne M. Casey, Clare Bell & Mark R. Kebbell. (2019) Police perceptions of the impact that ADHD has on conducting cognitive interviews with youth. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 26:2, pages 252-273.
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Kevin P. Madore, Helen G. Jing & Daniel L. Schacter. (2019) Selective effects of specificity inductions on episodic details: evidence for an event construction account. Memory 27:2, pages 250-260.
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Simon Wells & Susan E. Brandon. (2019) Interviewing in Criminal and Intelligence-Gathering Contexts: Applying Science. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health 18:1, pages 50-65.
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Craig Thorley, Louise Almond, Adam Gregory, Vanessa McAlonan & Amy McLoughlin. (2018) An archival analysis of sexual assault victims’ age estimation accuracy when describing stranger offenders. Psychology, Crime & Law 24:10, pages 1030-1049.
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Serena Carpenter, Anthony Cepak & Zhao Peng. (2018) An Exploration of the Complexity of Journalistic Interviewing Competencies. Journalism Studies 19:15, pages 2283-2303.
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Nina Westera, Sarah Zydervelt, Andy Kaladelfos & Rachel Zajac. (2017) Sexual assault complainants on the stand: a historical comparison of courtroom questioning. Psychology, Crime & Law 23:1, pages 15-31.
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Rui M. Paulo, Pedro B. Albuquerque & Ray Bull. (2016) The enhanced cognitive interview: expressions of uncertainty, motivation and its relation with report accuracy. Psychology, Crime & Law 22:4, pages 366-381.
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Aiman El Asam & Muthanna Samara. (2015) The Cognitive Interview: Improving Recall and Reducing Misinformation Among Arab Children. Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice 15:5, pages 449-477.
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Alana C. Krix, Melanie Sauerland, Fiona Gabbert & Lorraine Hope. (2014) Providing eyewitnesses with initial retrieval support: what works at immediate and subsequent recall?. Psychology, Crime & Law 20:10, pages 1005-1027.
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Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft, Graham F. Wagstaff & Katie Russell. (2014) Specialist police interviewer perceptions of the enhanced cognitive interview: usefulness, confidence and witness reliability. Police Practice and Research 15:6, pages 505-518.
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Raffaella Nori, Luca Bensi, Elisa Gambetti & Fiorella Giusberti. (2014) Individual differences in the Enhanced Cognitive Interview: the role of imagery. Psychology, Crime & Law 20:9, pages 833-851.
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Heidi J. Kuivaniemi-Smith, Robert A. Nash, Eleanor R. Brodie, Gregory Mahoney & Christopher Rynn. (2014) Producing facial composite sketches in remote Cognitive Interviews: a preliminary investigation. Psychology, Crime & Law 20:4, pages 389-406.
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Annelies Vredeveldt & Steven D. Penrod. (2013) Eye-closure improves memory for a witnessed event under naturalistic conditions. Psychology, Crime & Law 19:10, pages 893-905.
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Paul M. Dietze, Stefanie J. Sharman, Martine B. Powell & Donald M. Thomson. (2013) Does free recall moderate the effect of mental context reinstatement instructions on children's cued recall?. Psychology, Crime & Law 19:10, pages 881-891.
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Maïté Brunel, Jacques Py & Céline Launay. (2013) Cost and benefit of a new instruction for the cognitive interview: the open depth instruction. Psychology, Crime & Law 19:10, pages 845-863.
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NinaJ. Westera, MarkR. Kebbell & Becky Milne. (2013) It is better, but does it look better? Prosecutor perceptions of using rape complainant investigative interviews as evidence. Psychology, Crime & Law 19:7, pages 595-610.
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LindsayC. Malloy, JonniL. Johnson & GailS. Goodman. (2013) Children's Memory and Event Reports: The Current State of Knowledge and Best Practice. Journal of Forensic Social Work 3:2, pages 106-132.
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Rebecca Milne, Stefanie J. Sharman, Martine B. Powell & Sarah Mead. (2013) Assessing the Effectiveness of the Cognitive Interview for Children with Severe Intellectual Disabilities. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education 60:1, pages 18-29.
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Carole Peterson, KellyL. Warren & AshliH. Hayes. (2013) Revisiting Narrative Elaboration Training with an Ecologically Relevant Event. Journal of Cognition and Development 14:1, pages 154-174.
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Maria Hartwig, EvanC. Dawson, Olof Wrede & Karl Ask. (2012) Interviewing Victims of Repeated Domestic Violence: Investigators' Beliefs and Strategies. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 19:5, pages 672-681.
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Aldert Vrij, Sharon Leal, Samantha Mann & Ronald Fisher. (2012) Imposing cognitive load to elicit cues to deceit: inducing the reverse order technique naturally. Psychology, Crime & Law 18:6, pages 579-594.
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Nadja Schreiber Compo, Amy Hyman Gregory & Ronald Fisher. (2012) Interviewing behaviors in police investigators: a field study of a current US sample. Psychology, Crime & Law 18:4, pages 359-375.
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TheresaA. Gannon. (2012) A Message from the Incoming Editor: Long Live Psychology, Crime & Law . Psychology, Crime & Law 18:3, pages 229-230.
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PaulM. Dietze, MartineB. Powell & DonaldM. Thomson. (2012) Examination of the Effect of Mental Reinstatement of Context Across Developmental Level, Retention Interval and Type of Mnemonic Instruction. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 19:1, pages 89-103.
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CoralJ. Dando, Rachel Wilcock, Claudia Behnkle & Rebecca Milne. (2011) Modifying the cognitive interview: countenancing forensic application by enhancing practicability. Psychology, Crime & Law 17:6, pages 491-511.
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Judit Bembibre & Lorenzo Higueras. (2011) Differential effectiveness of the cognitive interview in a simulation of testimony. Psychology, Crime & Law 17:6, pages 473-489.
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Luca Bensi, Raffaella Nori, Elisa Gambetti & Fiorella Giusberti. (2011) The Enhanced Cognitive Interview: A study on the efficacy of shortened variants and single techniques. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 23:3, pages 311-321.
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Graham F. Wagstaff, Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft, Andrea M. Caddick, Lara J. Kirby & Elizabeth Lamont. (2011) Enhancing Witness Memory With Techniques Derived From Hypnotic Investigative Interviewing: Focused Meditation, Eye-Closure, and Context Reinstatement . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 59:2, pages 146-164.
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Mark Kebbell, Laurence Alison, Emily Hurren & Paul Mazerolle. (2010) How do sex offenders think the police should interview to elicit confessions from sex offenders?. Psychology, Crime & Law 16:7, pages 567-584.
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Anton Vedder & Laura Klaming. (2010) Human Enhancement for the Common Good—Using Neurotechnologies to Improve Eyewitness Memory. AJOB Neuroscience 1:3, pages 22-33.
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Wayne G. Whitehouse, Emily Carota Orne & David F. Dinges. (2010) Extreme Cognitive Interviewing: A Blueprint for False Memories Through Imagination Inflation . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 58:3, pages 269-287.
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Laura Klaming & Anton Vedder. (2009) Brushing Up our Memories: Can we use Neurotechnologies to Improve Eyewitness Memory?. Law, Innovation and Technology 1:2, pages 203-221.
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Coral Dando, Rachel Wilcock & Rebecca Milne. (2009) The Cognitive Interview: novice police officers' witness/victim interviewing practices. Psychology, Crime & Law 15:8, pages 679-696.
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AngelaD. Evans & Kim Roberts. (2009) The effects of different paraphrasing styles on the quality of reports from young child witnesses. Psychology, Crime & Law 15:6, pages 531-546.
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Charity Brown, TobyJ. Lloyd-Jones & Mark Robinson. (2008) Eliciting person descriptions from eyewitnesses: A survey of police perceptions of eyewitness performance and reported use of interview techniques. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 20:3, pages 529-560.
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SiegfriedL. Sporer. (2007) Person descriptions as retrieval cues: Do they really help?. Psychology, Crime & Law 13:6, pages 591-609.
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TimothyJ. Perfect, Ian Dennis & Amelia Snell. (2007) The effects of local and global processing orientation on eyewitness identification performance. Memory 15:7, pages 784-798.
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Kristina Westerberg & Sara Strandberg. (2007) Showering is More than Resistance: Cognitive Interview Sequences in Residential Homes for Elderly Clients with Dementia. Qualitative Research in Psychology 4:1-2, pages 15-28.
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Magali Ginet & Fanny Verkampt. (2007) The cognitive interview: Is its benefit affected by the level of witness emotion?. Memory 15:4, pages 450-464.
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AllisonM. Wright & RobynE. Holliday. (2007) Interviewing cognitively impaired older adults: How useful is a Cognitive Interview?. Memory 15:1, pages 17-33.
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AntoniT. Centofanti & John Reece. (2006) The cognitive interview and its effect on misleading postevent information. Psychology, Crime & Law 12:6, pages 669-683.
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Julie Robinson & James McGuire. (2006) Suggestibility and children with mild learning disabilities: The use of the cognitive interview. Psychology, Crime & Law 12:5, pages 537-556.
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Carl Martin Allwood, Karl Ask & Pär Anders Granhag. (2005) The Cognitive Interview: Effects on the realism in witnesses’ confidence in their free recall. Psychology, Crime & Law 11:2, pages 183-198.
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Allison M. Wright & Laurence Alison. (2004) QUESTIONING SEQUENCES IN CANADIAN POLICE INTERVIEWS: CONSTRUCTING AND CONFIRMING THE COURSE OF EVENTS?. Psychology, Crime & Law 10:2, pages 137-154.
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Pär Anders Granhag, Anna-carin Jonsson & Carl Martin Allwood. (2004) THE COGNITIVE INTERVIEW AND ITS EFFECT ON WITNESSES’ CONFIDENCE. Psychology, Crime & Law 10:1, pages 37-52.
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Lucy Akehurst, Rebecca Milne & Gunter Ko¨hnken. (2003) The Effects Of Children'S Age and Delay on Recall in a Cognitive or Structured Interview. Psychology, Crime & Law 9:1, pages 97-107.
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