Abstract

Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator subsequently. Laboratory studies can provide insight into how acute stress at encoding and retrieval affects memory performance. However, previous findings exploring this issue have been mixed. Across two preregistered experiments, we examined the effects of stress during encoding and retrieval on face and word recognition performance. We used the Maastricht Acute Stress Test (MAST) to induce stress and verified the success of the stress manipulation with blood pressure measures, salivary cortisol levels, and negative affect scores. To examine differences in stressor timing, participants encoded target faces or words both when confronted with the stressor and during the subsequent cortisol peak and retrieved these stimuli 24 h later. We found neither effects of acute stress on face recognition memory during encoding or retrieval (Experiments 1 and 2), nor effects of encoding stress on word recognition memory (Experiment 2). Bayesian analyses largely provided substantial or strong evidence for the null hypotheses. We emphasize the need for well-powered experiments using contemporary methodology for a more complete understanding of the effect of acute stress on face recognition memory.

Highlights

  • The legal system often relies on eyewitnesses to identify perpetrators in the course of criminal investigations

  • It is known that acute stress at retrieval negatively affects episodic memory performance (Shields, Sazma, McCullough, & Yonelinas, 2017; Wolf, 2017), but these effects are understudied in tasks with more applied eyewitness relevance, such as face recognition

  • Failing to support Hypothesis 4, we found no evidence for effects of acute stress on word recognition performance

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Summary

Introduction

The legal system often relies on eyewitnesses to identify perpetrators in the course of criminal investigations. It is known that acute stress at retrieval negatively affects episodic memory performance (Shields, Sazma, McCullough, & Yonelinas, 2017; Wolf, 2017), but these effects are understudied in tasks with more applied eyewitness relevance, such as face recognition. Laboratory experiments examining the effects of acute stress at encoding on episodic memory performance often show mixed findings (e.g., Deffenbacher, Bornstein, Penrod, & McGorty, 2004; Shields et al, 2017; Vogel & Schwabe, 2016). It remains unclear how acute stress experienced at encoding or retrieval might affect witness face recognition performance

Effects of acute stress at encoding on memory performance
Effects of acute stress at retrieval on memory performance
The present experiment
Participants
Design
Stimuli and memory test
Cortisol We collected saliva samples from participants twice on Day 1
Procedure
Data analysis
Manipulation checks
Effects of acute stress on memory performance
Conclusion
Full Text
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