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Original Articles

Providing eyewitnesses with initial retrieval support: what works at immediate and subsequent recall?

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Pages 1005-1027 | Received 10 Sep 2013, Accepted 04 Mar 2014, Published online: 03 Apr 2014

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

Read on this site (6)

Natali Dilevski, Hayley J. Cullen, Annabel Marsh, Helen M. Paterson & Celine van Golde. (2022) ‘Tell me what just happened’: the effect of immediate recall on adult memory for instances of a repeated event. Psychology, Crime & Law 0:0, pages 1-25.
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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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Chantal Chevroulet, Helen M. Paterson, Richard I. Kemp & Celine van Golde. (2022) Technology and eyewitness memory: evaluating the efficacy of a novel digital cued recall tool. Psychology, Crime & Law 0:0, pages 1-18.
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Chantal Chevroulet, Helen M. Paterson, Angus Yu, Emily Chew & Richard I. Kemp. (2022) The impact of recall timing on the preservation of eyewitness memory. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 29:3, pages 471-486.
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Uta Kraus, Fabian Zeier, Wolfgang Wagner, Marko Paelecke & Johannes S. Hewig. (2017) Comparing the quality of memory reports in different initial eyewitness questioning approaches. Cogent Psychology 4:1.
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Alana C. Krix, Melanie Sauerland, Harald Merckelbach, Fiona Gabbert & Lorraine Hope. (2015) How effective is retrieval support for witnesses with different levels of working and source memory?. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 27:3, pages 335-348.
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Articles from other publishers (10)

Ruth Horry, Chelsea Hughes, Anagha Sharma, Fiona Gabbert & Lorraine Hope. (2020) A meta‐analytic review of the Self‐Administered Interview©: Quantity and accuracy of details reported on initial and subsequent retrieval attempts . Applied Cognitive Psychology 35:2, pages 428-444.
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Adam Charles Harvey, Aldert Vrij, Sharon Leal, Haneen Deeb, Lorraine Hope & Samantha Mann. (2020) Amplifying recall after delays via initial interviewing: Inoculating truth-tellers' memory as a function of encoding quality. Acta Psychologica 209, pages 103130.
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Henry Otgaar, Corine Ruiter, David La Rooy, Robert Horselenberg, Irit Hershkowitz & Koen Geijsen. (2019) The burden of proof of the Dutch police: Why the scenario model continues to deliver low‐quality child interviews. Applied Cognitive Psychology 33:5, pages 901-903.
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Kim van Oorsouw, Nick J. Broers & Melanie Sauerland. (2019) Alcohol intoxication impairs eyewitness memory and increases suggestibility: Two field studies. Applied Cognitive Psychology 33:3, pages 439-455.
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Carla L. MacLean, Patricia I. Coburn, Kristin Chong & Deborah L. Connolly. (2018) Breaking script: Deviations and postevent information in adult memory for a repeated event. Applied Cognitive Psychology 32:4, pages 474-486.
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Tjeu P.M. Theunissen, Thomas Meyer, Amina Memon & Camille C. Weinsheimer. (2017) Adult Eyewitness Memory for Single Versus Repeated Traumatic Events. Applied Cognitive Psychology 31:2, pages 164-174.
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Nathalie Brackmann, Henry Otgaar, Melanie Sauerland & Mark L. Howe. (2016) The Impact of Testing on the Formation of Children's and Adults' False Memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology 30:5, pages 785-794.
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Melanie Sauerland, Svenja Mehlkopf, Alana C Krix & Anna Sagana. (2016) Deceiving suspects about the content of their alibis: consequences for truthful and untruthful suspects. Journal of Forensic Practice 18:2, pages 143-154.
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Alana C. Krix, Melanie Sauerland, Linsey H. C. Raymaekers, Amina Memon, Conny W. E. M. Quaedflieg & Tom Smeets. (2016) Eyewitness Evidence Obtained with the Self-Administered Interview© Is Unaffected by Stress. Applied Cognitive Psychology 30:1, pages 103-112.
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Alana C. Krix, Melanie Sauerland, Clemens Lorei & Imke Rispens. (2015) Consistency across Repeated Eyewitness Interviews: Contrasting Police Detectives’ Beliefs with Actual Eyewitness Performance. PLOS ONE 10:2, pages e0118641.
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