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Articles

Effects of perceptual load on eyewitness memory are moderated by individual differences in cognitive ability

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Pages 450-460 | Received 19 Sep 2019, Accepted 08 Feb 2020, Published online: 18 Feb 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Previous research has identified perceptual load – the amount of perceptual processing required by a scene – as a potentially important factor in eyewitness memory. Here, we investigated whether effects of perceptual load on eyewitness memory for a simulated crime are moderated by individual differences in cognitive ability. We presented participants with a video of a simulated crime that imposed either high or low perceptual load, followed by a written narrative which contained a mixture of neutral and misleading descriptions of critical details. We examined the effects of three cognitive variables (working memory capacity, verbal cognitive ability and analytical reasoning) on participants’ ability to accurately recall details of the video in both the misinformation and control conditions, and to detect a change in the clothing of a main character. General cognitive ability was associated with improved global memory for details of the event, and enhanced change detection under load. Greater WM capacity and a tendency towards analytical reasoning were both associated with resistance to misinformation under conditions of high perceptual load. We conclude that higher levels of cognitive ability, assessed across a number of domains, may enable eyewitnesses to withstand the effects of perceptual load and preserve the accuracy of their memories.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr Gillian Murphy for constructive comments on a draft of this manuscript.

Data availability statement

The materials, data and analysis code associated with this paper are publicly available via the Open Science Framework and may be found at https://osf.io/fhvms/.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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