Recently posted to SSRN:
"'Unconscious Transference' Can Be an Instance of 'Change Blindness'"
Applied Cognitive Psychology, Vol. 22, pp. 605-623, 2008
UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2008-09
DEBORAH DAVIS, University of Nevada, Reno
ELIZABETH F. LOFTUS, University of California, Irvine - Department of Psychology and Social Behavior
SAMUEL VANOUS, University of Utah
MICHAEL CUCCIARE, Stanford University - School of Medicine
Three experiments investigated the role of 'change blindness' in mistaken eyewitness identifications of innocent bystanders to a simulated crime. Two innocent people appeared briefly in a filmed scene in a supermarket. The 'continuous innocent' (CI) walked down the liquor aisle and passed behind a stack of boxes, where upon the perpetrator emerged and stole a bottle of liquor, thereby resulting in an action sequence promoting the illusion of continuity between perpetrator and innocent. The 'discontinuous innocent' (DI) was shown immediately afterward in the produce aisle. Results revealed that: (1) more than half of participants failed to notice the change between the CI and the perpetrator, (2) among those who failed to notice the change, more misidentified the 'CI' than the 'DI', a pattern that did not hold for those who did notice the change. Participants were less likely to notice the change when they were distracted while watching the video.
Comments