Project Details
The revelation effect: A test of theories and the impact on witness and juror judgments
Applicant
Dr. André Aßfalg
Subject Area
General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Term
from 2012 to 2015
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 232646231
Consider the following actions: Solving a puzzle, memorizing a phone number, or solving a simple math equation. Each of these actions will likely distort any succeeding judgments of the acting person. For example, a person may appear more familiar, the statement “the leopard is the fastest land animal” is more likely to appear true, or one may be more likely to claim to have broken a window playing ball as a child. This type of judgment distortion is called revelation effect. My research project has two goals. The first goal is to identify the mechanisms underlying the revelation effect. For this purpose I conduct tests of extant and new theories that attempt to explain the revelation effect. The second goal is to investigate whether the revelation effect involves judgment distortions in critical real-world events. This includes, for example, an eyewitness´ identification of the perpetrator in a lineup. Without knowing it, eyewitnesses might falsely accuse an innocent because of the revelation effect. Therefore, the second part of my research project investigates whether the revelation effect distorts judgments of eyewitnesses or jurors.
DFG Programme
Research Fellowships
International Connection
Canada
Host
Dr. Daniel Bernstein
Participating Person
Professorin Elizabeth F. Loftus, Ph.D.