User:ClareParlett/sandbox/Approaches to Knowledge/Seminar Group 11/Truth in Memory
This is for the UCL BASc Approaches to Knowledge Course: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/basc/current/core/atk.
This page is for one team in Seminar 11 to work on their content for the UCL Wiki book for the end of the term and will be populated over the period 19/11/2018 - 17/12/2018.
It has been created by Clare Lewis who is the seminar leader. See https://www.ucl.ac.uk/basc/people/academic-staff/clare-lewis. Please do not delete this page.
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Clare
Introduction
editLiving in a “post-truth” society [1], where objectivity is overruled by emotions and personal belief when shaping public opinion, evidence-based truth seems to be endangered. Our society is dominated by individual truths in the form of shared experiences through social media. Those individual truths, due to the limits of personal judgements, are only hypotheses based on generalisation from personal experience and lack of solid proof.[2] However, memory, as a representative of individual truth, is widely used as witness testimonies in courtrooms to supply the application of law, an evidence-based truth system.
Memory in the Courtroom
editTruth and Law
editLaw is associated automatically with "the search for truth" [3], however, in this discipline, truth is ‘not an explanatorily useful concept’ [4] implying that there is no need for veracity to plea someone guilty. The legal system relation’s with truth is lacking of definition and is ambiguous in the sense that the legal system searches “formal legal truth” which is dictated by laws and not by veracity [5]. In other words, if it has been proven by facts, including faulty eyewitness testimonies, the guilt of a party, then the die is cast. Witness's narrative truth comes from their reconstruction of events, which the court considers solid evidence.[3]
Real-life Cases and Studies of False Memory
editIn the United States, 300 people where convicted of crimes they didn’t commit and spend years in prison before DNA testing could have proven their innocence. Of those 300 , three quarters were victims of prosecutors's or witnesses's false memories. 19 year-old, Holly Ramona started seeing a psychiatrist for her bulimia and depression problems. With the help of sodium amytal, a drug normally used to treat short-term insomnia - also known as the « truth drug » due to its capacity to restore lost memories - remembered being sexually abused by her father as a child. Prior to seeing her psychiatrist, she didn’t recall any such thing. She then went on to sue her father, Gary Ramona, who himself sued the psychiatrist for having induced false memories to his daughter's brain. [6] False memory syndrome is more common than one might think. Psychologist, Elizabeth Loftus, specialised in false memories, compares it to a wikipedia page : «you can go in there and change it but so can other people ». She conducted different studies proving that misinformation coming from another person can alter one's memory. [7] In Canada, a study made subjects believe that, as a child, they were attacked by a vicious animal and half them actually "remembered" this episode. [8] Forensic psychologist, Scott Fraser, studies how humans remember crimes. During a TED talk, he elaborates on the case of 16-years-old Francisco Carillo convicted of murder after being recognised by witnesses. He spend 20 years in prison before one of the witnesses (the son of the victim) confessed it was a false memory and that he never saw the face of the murderer. [9] Steve Titus was also wrongfully put in jail for a rape allegations due to the victim thinking it was him. [10]
When giving a testimony, witnesses are under oath : “I swear by Almighty God that the evidence I shall give shall be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” [11] How can involuntary false memory be explained?
The Process of Remembering and Altered Memory
editMemory Retrieval and Suggestions
editThe full process of human memory has three stages : encoding, storage and retrieval [12]. Alteration can come in either stage as memory is selective and susceptible to influence.
The psychological process of remembering can be understood through Frederic Bartlett's "The War of Ghosts" study (1932) as a process of reconstruction. When asked to recall the Native-American story, participants were found to change, to "westernise", to shorten, specific details having been forgotten, and overall distorting the story by adding previously inexistent details or projected emotions. Bartlett’s study shows how the act of remembrance is not a passive action but rather an active one, unconsciously distorting reality [13]. The courtroom does not provide a space where memory is not subject to change : persuasive language, prejudices , roles of “good and bad” displayed as “prosecutor and defendant”, the formal setting. When confronted to a police line-up, studies show that participants posing as witnesses believe that those on the other side of the mirror, even if innocent, are guilty. Furthermore, it is shown that 40% of police lineups end in the prime suspect getting picked but, more interestingly, up to 20% end up in the filler (innocent person with similar traits to the suspect) getting picked; demonstrating the effects that expectations, in these settings, have on memory.[14] . The settings are not the only factors that can change a person’s memory of events and faces, the words employed play a part as well [15].
Influencing factors on witnesses
editThe accuracy of memories could be affected by many psychological factors during the three forming stages of memory, namely perception, retainment and retrieval. The perception process is affected by events factors, i.e. the interaction between cases and observers and individual factors, meaning witness’s character and mental conditions. An example for event factors is violence of an event, specifically, the more violent an incident is, the worse it is remembered. The retainment is the most changeable process since it could be influenced by up to 12 separate aspects, for instance, post-event information, enhancing memory and guessing. Particularly, enhancing memory influence suggests that after-event discussion could shift the memory towards this event. Meanwhile, memory could also be created based on deduction from guessing which matches more to social favours of an image of comprehensiveness. In terms of the retrieval,the environment and type of retrieval, questioning, questioners and other two factors have effects on it. Studies[16] among college students demonstrate that memories are better recalled if recalling at the original happening place of the incident rather than in an unfamiliar place like a police interview room.[17]
Memory in the face of trauma
editThe negative impacts of traumatic experiences consist usually on that memory being repressed meaning that it isn’t present in the conscious mind but can still be accessible through therapeutical procedures due to its presence in the hippocampus, centre for long-term memory [18]. According to psychiatrist Bessel A. Van der Kolk traumatic experiences affect one’s memory in four ways : Traumatic amnesia (Unconscious of the event until a stimuli triggers the memory), Global memory impairment (More susceptible to suggestions) , Disassociation (Memory is fragmentary), birth of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[19]. Eyewitnesses are directly exposed to stressful traumatic experience, thus generating memory alteration.
Conclusion
editLoftus’s 1974 study demonstrates that, for the same case, when no eye-witness testimony is given only 18% of the participants judged the defendant guilty; but when an eye-witness is presented, 72% of participants find the defendant guilty [20]. Being such a fundamental aspect of trails, eye-witness testimony cannot be replaced. On another side, the rise of technology, such as DNA testing, has allowed us to verify those testimonies.
Should science, an empiric discipline, be trusted to present the truth?
Notes
edit- ↑ Yuval Noah HarariAre we living in a post-truth era? Yes, but that’s because we’re a post-truth species. 7 September 2018; Available : https://ideas.ted.com/are-we-living-in-a-post-truth-era-yes-but-thats-because-were-a-post-truth-species/ [Last accessed : 7 December 2018]
- ↑ W.S. Taylor, Is Truth individual or social, Journal of Social Psychology; Worcester, Mass. Vol. 6, Iss. 3, (Aug 1, 1935) p. 348.
- ↑ a b http://www5.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNDAULawRw/2009/4.pdf
- ↑ Dennis Patterson, Law and Truth, 1st edition,Oxford University Press, 1996
- ↑ Matt Matravers,‘More Than Just Illogical’: Truth and Jury Nullification, Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2004
- ↑ August Piper Jr., M.D. , December 2013, False Memory Syndrome foundation, http://www.fmsfonline.org/index.php?ginterest=IsThereATruthSerum?
- ↑ Elizabeth Loftus, 2013, TedGlobal 2013
- ↑ Elizabeth Loftus, 2013, TedGlobal 2013
- ↑ Scott Fraser, 2012, TEDxUSC 2012
- ↑ Paul Henderson, 1981, The Seattle times, http://old.seattletimes.com/news/local/tituscase/lookingback.html
- ↑ Armed Forces (Summary Appeal Court) Rules 2009, rule 28(3) and Schedule 1
- ↑ Matthew MacDonald, Your Brain : The Missing Manual, Chapter 5, pp.93-106, Progue Press, 2009
- ↑ F.C. Bartlett, Remembering: A study in experimental and social psychology, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1932
- ↑ Memory in the Real Word, Cohen and Conaway ,Routledge, 3 edition (13 Dec. 2007)
- ↑ Cohen G. and Conway M., Memory in the real world, Wright D.B and Loftus E.F, Eyewitness memory, pp.95-97, 3rd edition, Psychology Press, 2008
- ↑ Abernathy, E.M., ‘The effect changed environmental conditions upon the results of college examinations’, 1940, 10 Journal of Psychology,pp. 293-301; Feingold, G.A., ’ The Influence of environment on identification of persons and things’, 1914, 5 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, pp. 39-51
- ↑ Heaton-Armstrong, & Heaton-Armstrong, Anthony. ,2006. Witness testimony : Psychological, investigative and evidential perspectives / edited by Anthony Heaton-Armstrong .... [et al.]. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 8-17
- ↑ Steven Jay Lynn and Kevin M. McCconkey, Truth in memory,Chapter 13, pp. 331-332, The Guilford Press, 1998
- ↑ Bessel A. van der Kolk & Rita Fisler, Dissociation and the Fragmentary Nature of Traumatic Memories:Overview and Exploratory Study, 1995 http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/users/peterson/psy430s2001/Van%20der%20Kolk%20Fragmentary%20Nature%20of%20Traumatic%20Memory%20J%20Traumatic%20Stress%201995.pdf
- ↑ E.F. Loftus, Reconstructing memory : The incredible eyewitness, Psychology Today,8, pp116-119, 1974