ommended by research scientists play out in fi eld settings. Arguments about
such matters as blind and sequential presentation methods will likely shift from
a consideration of what impact these procedures have on witness and system
performance to policy questions concerning the precise manner in which pro-
cedures should be deployed.
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Case
Daubert v Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals , 509 U.S. 579 ( 1993 ).
Chapter Sixteen
Truthfulness in Witnesses ’ and
Suspects ’ Reports
A. Daniel Yarmey
University of Guelph
Ontario
Although errors of omission and commission typically occur in eyewitness
memory, it is often assumed by psycho - legal researchers that mistakes in eye-
witness memory are honest errors that occur as a function of misperception,
interference, retrieval failures, and so forth. In contrast, police often interview
witnesses and suspects who are uncooperative and may, in fact, intentionally
fabricate their testimony. Deception may be defi ned as ‘ a successful or unsuc-
cessful deliberate attempt, without forewarning, to create in another a belief
that the communicator considers to be untrue ’ (Vrij, 2000 : 6). Although there
has been substantial interest in the investigation of verbal and nonverbal cor-
relates of deception (e.g., Vrij, 2000 ; Watkins & Turtle, 2003 ), and in deter-
mining the abilities of laypersons, police offi cers and psychologists to detect
deception (e.g., K ö hnken, 1987 ; Ekman, 2001 ), research on deception in an
eyewitness memory paradigm is limited. Relatively little is known regarding
the distortions that occur in eyewitness descriptions and identifi cation as a
function of witness deception.
The purpose of this chapter is to describe some recent studies from our
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