In a new study, published today in the
journal Legal and
Criminology Psychology, researchers from the University of Surrey
have found further evidence to suggest that eyewitnesses to crimes remember
more accurate details when they close their eyes. The team also discovered that
building a rapport with witnesses also helped them to remember more.
178 participants took part across two studies. In the first experiment,
participants watched a film depicting an electrician entering a property,
carrying out jobs and stealing items. Each participant was then randomly
assigned one of four conditions, either eyes closed or open, and having built
up a rapport with the interviewer or not. They were then asked a series of
questions about the film, such as 'what was written on the front of the van?' The
team found that closing their eyes led participants to answer 23 per cent more
of the questions correctly. Building rapport also increased the number of
correct answers, however, closing their eyes was effective regardless of
whether rapport had been built or not.
The second experiment took the memory task one step further, by asking
witnesses about things they had heard, as well as things they had seen. This
time, participants watched a clip from Crimewatch, showing a reconstruction of
a burglary where an elderly man was attacked in his home. Results showed that closing
their eyes helped participants recall both audio and visual details, both when
they had built rapport and when they had not.
Across both experiments, participants who did not build rapport said
they felt less comfortable when they closed their eyes, compared to when they
kept their eyes open. In contrast, participants who built rapport felt more
comfortable when they closed their eyes.
"It is clear from our research that closing the eyes and building
rapport help with witness recall," said lead author Dr Robert Nash from
the University of
Surrey .
"Although closing your eyes to remember seems to work whether or
not rapport has been built beforehand, our results show that building rapport
makes witnesses more at ease with closing their eyes. That in itself is vital
if we are to encourage witnesses to use this helpful technique during
interviews."
Journal Reference:
Robert A. Nash, Alena Nash, Aimee Morris, Siobhan L. Smith. Does rapport-building boost the
eyewitness eyeclosure effect in closed questioning? Legal and Criminological Psychology, 2015; DOI: 10.1111/lcrp.12073
This
explains why we close our eyes in dreaming and recalling pleasant experiences.
It makes us smile happily, right?
Natalia
Levis-Fox
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