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Hayley Cullen

πŸ‘€ Speaker
107 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

With kidnapping, I think, you know, we get the audience to think about it.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

When they hear kidnapping, they probably think, stranger comes up to child, child makes a fuss, kicks and screams, kidnapper pulls them into their van, drives off.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

But that mental representation we have might be very different to how kidnapping actually occurs.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So inattentional blindness, it sounds like a complicated term, but it's pretty simple.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

It's essentially looking without seeing.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So it's the idea that when you're focusing your attention on something specific, you can fail to notice other very obvious and important things in your environment.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So for a witness, if they're focusing their attention on driving or watching their kids at the park or something very specific, a crime might actually happen in front of them that they just don't even notice at all.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

There was a case in Boston of a police officer, Kenny Conley, and he was called to the scene of a crime in a park one night.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

He arrives at the scene, he sees the suspect and he pursues them on foot.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

and he was brutally assaulted.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

This happened just metres away from Kenny Conley as he was running past, and he claimed that he didn't notice this crime occurring because he was so focused on pursuing who he thought the suspect was that he didn't see this happening at all.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

Now, a lot of people doubted this claim that Kenny Conley gave, but researchers in the United States led by Chris Chabris, they actually conducted a study where they tried to simulate the conditions of the Kenny Conley case.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So they had participants who they took to this park

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

And they had them complete a counting task that, you know, they were running along a path, counting the number of times someone in front of them touched their head.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So just a basic task.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

And they simulated the assault off the path, like what happened in Kenny Conley's case.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

And they found that around 50% of people didn't notice the crime.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

So when they replicated the known facts of Kenny Conley's case, it seemed like a highly plausible thing that he was claiming.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

There's been research since then that does show that, you know, when you get your participants to complete some kind of task, like they might be counting something or watching for something specific in a scene, they might fail to notice a theft or a physical assault or something like that.

All In The Mind
Ambiguous crimes and inattentional blindness: the science of eyewitness memory

it is very hard to find good predictors of whether someone would notice a crime or not.

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