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For as long as we have been researching human memory, psychologists
have been investigating how people remember and forget. This
research is regularly drawn upon in our legal systems.
Historically, we have relied upon eyewitness memory to help judge
responsibility and adjudicate truth, but memory is malleable, prone
to error, and susceptible to bias. Even confident eyewitnesses make
mistakes, and even accurate witnesses sometimes find their
testimony subjected to harsh scrutiny. Emerging from this
environment, the Cognitive Interview (CI) became a means of
assisting cooperative witnesses with recalling more information
without sacrificing accuracy. First used by police interviewing
adult witnesses, it is now used with many populations in many
contexts, including public health, accident reconstruction, and the
interrogation of terror suspects. Evidence-Based Investigative
Interviewing reviews the application of cognitive research to
investigative interviewing, revealing how principles of cognition,
memory, and social dynamics may increase the accuracy of eyewitness
testimony. It provides evidence-based applications for
investigators beyond the forensic domain in areas such as
eyewitness identification, detecting deception, and interviewing
children. Drawing together the work of thirty-three authors across
both the academic and practice communities, this comprehensive
collection is essential reading for researchers in psychology,
forensics, and disciplines such as epidemiology and gerontology.
For as long as we have been researching human memory, psychologists
have been investigating how people remember and forget. This
research is regularly drawn upon in our legal systems.
Historically, we have relied upon eyewitness memory to help judge
responsibility and adjudicate truth, but memory is malleable, prone
to error, and susceptible to bias. Even confident eyewitnesses make
mistakes, and even accurate witnesses sometimes find their
testimony subjected to harsh scrutiny. Emerging from this
environment, the Cognitive Interview (CI) became a means of
assisting cooperative witnesses with recalling more information
without sacrificing accuracy. First used by police interviewing
adult witnesses, it is now used with many populations in many
contexts, including public health, accident reconstruction, and the
interrogation of terror suspects. Evidence-Based Investigative
Interviewing reviews the application of cognitive research to
investigative interviewing, revealing how principles of cognition,
memory, and social dynamics may increase the accuracy of eyewitness
testimony. It provides evidence-based applications for
investigators beyond the forensic domain in areas such as
eyewitness identification, detecting deception, and interviewing
children. Drawing together the work of thirty-three authors across
both the academic and practice communities, this comprehensive
collection is essential reading for researchers in psychology,
forensics, and disciplines such as epidemiology and gerontology.
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