Cross-cultural differences in eyewitness memory reports
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Applied Cognitive Psychology
Abstract
Increasingly, investigators conduct interviews with eyewitnesses from different cultures.
The culture in which people have been socialised can impact the way they
encode, remember, and report information about their experiences. We examined
whether eyewitness memory reports of mock witnesses from collectivistic (sub-
Saharan Africa) and individualistic (Northern Europe) cultures differed regarding quantity
and quality of central and background details reported. Mock witnesses (total
N = 200) from rural Ghana, urban Ghana, and the Netherlands were shown stimuli
scenes of crimes in Dutch and Ghanaian settings and provided free and cued recalls.
Individualistic culture mock witnesses reported the most details, irrespective of detail
type. For each cultural group, mock witnesses reported more correct central details
when crime was witnessed in their own native setting than a non-native setting,
though for different recall domains. The findings provide insight for legal and investigative
professionals as well as immigration officials eliciting memory reports in crosscultural
contexts.
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Research Article
