Explain why recognition is usually superior to recall, how recognition is used by police departments, how various distracters can make recognition inaccurate, and how this inaccuracy can be minimized
What will be an ideal response?
Answer will include that recognition memory involves the ability to correctly identify previously learned information. Recognition is usually superior to recall because more memory cues are present to "jog" one's memory. Recognition tasks include the use of photo arrays and lineups by police departments. However, the kind of distracters used can lead to inaccurate memories. If distracters are very similar to the correct item, memory may be poor. A reverse problem occurs when only one choice looks like it is correct. This can produce a false positive, or false sense of recognition. There have been instances in which witnesses describe a criminal as black, tall, or young. Then, a lineup was held in which the suspect was the only African American among whites, the only tall suspect, or the only young person. In such cases, a false identification is very likely. A better method is to have all the distracters look like the person witnesses described. Also, to reduce false positives, witnesses should be warned that the culprit may not be present. Many hundreds of people have been put in jail on the basis of mistaken eyewitness memories. To avoid tragic mistakes, it is far better to show witnesses one photo at a time
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According to Piaget, "out of sight out of mind" would apply to children in the __________ stage of development
a) formal operational b) sensorimotor c) concrete operational d) preoperational
If a 4½-year-old child is asked to draw a person who is first standing upright and then has fallen down, the child is likely to draw the figure in the vertical position,
and then the figure lying in the horizontal position with no other pictures in between to demonstrate the person falling. This child would be demonstrating a lack of __________. a) egocentric thought b) intuitive thought c) conservation d) transformation