Title: Forensic Hypnosis and Cognitive Interviewing
1Forensic Hypnosis and Cognitive Interviewing
2Hypnosis vs Cognitive Interviewing
- Share the same goal
- To increase information remembered
- Neither have been recommended for interrogation
- Both require a willing interviewee
3Defining Forensic Hypnosis
- An investigative memory retrieval technique used
to enhance recall in legally relevant situations
- Hypnosis is a state of increased receptivity to
suggestion characterized by an altered state of
consciousness - Hypnotized persons are aware of what is gong on!
4Guidelines for Forensic Hypnosis
- Its use must be consistent with state law
- Its use must be consistent with clinical and
legal safeguards of the subject - A rationale for using hypnosis must be made prior
to its use - Hypnosis should be used for major crime only
after all other procedures have been exhausted - Not recommended for use with juveniles
- Not recommended for use with persons having
cognitive disabilities
5Phases of Forensic Hypnosis Induction
- The hypnotist relaxes the suspect and tests
responsivity to suggestion
6Phases of Forensic Hypnosis Narrative
- The subject is asked to describe the event
7Phases of Forensic Hypnosis Closure
- Subject instruction and closing end the session
8Phases of Forensic Hypnosis Recall
- After the hypnotic session the subject is asked
to recall all memories of the crime since the
memory enhancement
9Challenges to Hypnotic Memory Retrieval
- Confabulation
- Faking
- Memory hardening suggestibility
10Confabulation
- Confabulation is a fantasy that has unconsciously
replaced fact in memory - May be based partially on fact
- May be complete construction of imagination
- It is a filling in of the memory gaps to make the
event more comprehensible
11Faking
- Hypnosis can be faked
- People are capable of lying in hypnosis
- No single indicator exists to be sure that the
subject is faking
12Memory Hardening Suggestibility
- Memory hardening gives the subject increased
confidence in things remembered during hypnosis,
whether the facts are true or false - Suggestions made during the post-hypnotic stage
can become permanent
13Challenges to the use of Forensic Hypnosis
- In 1985 the American Medical Association
recommended the use of hypnosis be limited to the
investigative processes and results not be used
as evidence in court
- Few courts allow the introduction of hypnotically
induced information - Texas and Nevada are examples with law that
specifically allows hypnotically refreshed recall
for use in criminal and civil cases
14What is the Cognitive Technique?
- Both specific and general memory jogging guidance
techniques were identified and combined to form
the cognitive interview technique
15The Foundation of the Cognitive Interview Method
- The foundation of the Cognitive Interviewing
Method is the use of mnemonics
- Mnemonics are memory jogging techniques
- Mnemonics are methods for remembering information
that is otherwise difficult to recall, a memory
tool
16The Four Primary Mnemonics
- Mentally reconstruct the context of the event
- Report every detail, regardless of apparent
importance - Recall the events in a variety of orders, moving
back and forwards in time - Change perspectives and recall from a different
points of view
17Reconstruction Mnemonic
- Prior to asking for the narration, recreate the
circumstances associated with the event - Look for their state of mind just prior to the
event and the physical environment surrounding
the event - Instruct the interviewee to think about the
circumstances that surrounded the incident
- Time
- year, month, day, time of day
- Place
- location, surroundings, where were you in
relation to houses, cars, furniture, equipment of
any kind
18Reconstruction involve the Senses
- Sensory Cues
- visual images, sounds, odors, tastes, skin
sensations, weather, lightening - People
- physical appearances remind you of anyone, why
clothing behavior anything unusual
- Conversation
- What was said by whom what particular words,
phrase numbers, high-low- odd-even names, first
letter name speech characteristics, high or low
voice - Thoughts
- what statements were you making in your own head
(why me, I am going to die, will I live?)
19Report Everything Mnemonic
- The interviewer explains that some people hold
back information because they dont know what is
important
- Through out the interview remind the interviewee
that you would like them to talk about everything
they remember - Give the interviewee permission to recount
everything
20Changing the Order of Events Mnemonic
- Instruct the interviewee to recall events in a
different order - The instruction may include starting from a point
that they remember most vividly
- Start at the end and work forward
- Start with what is most important to you, then go
forward or backward
21Changing the Perspective Mnemonic
- Instruct the witness to recall the incident from
the perspective of others who were present
- Try to put himself or herself in the role of
someone else and think about what he or she must
have seen
22Additional Memory Jogging Mnemonics
- physical appearance
- names
- numbers
- speech characteristics
- conversation
23Cognitive Interview Instruction
- The researcher asks the questions in the
standardized way but also asks the respondents to
think aloud, highlight problems, express their
opinion, make judgments on the questions - Talk about concentration
- Use active listening
24Step One Meet Greet
- Develop rapport
- Encourage active participation
- Report everything mnemonic
- Give permission not to answer
25Step Two Narrative Phases
- Free recall
- Guided recall
- reconstruction mnemonic
- Clarification
26Step Three - Extensive Recall through Mnemonics
- The two primary techniques that have been shown
to provide more information are - Switching the Temporal Order (recalling from
different order mnemonic) - Changing the Perspective mnemonic
27Step Four Summary and Closure
- Briefly summarize the information the interviewee
has provided - Ask the witness to interrupt immediately if
he/she remembers new information or there is any
errors in the review
28Summary and Closure
- Always end the interview on a positive note, so
be sure to spend the time helping him or her
mentally relocate to present time. - Thank the interviewee for their time and effort.
- Remind him/her to call new information is
recalled.
29Challenges to the use of Cognitive Interviewing
- In a court hearing on the use of Cognitive
Interviewing (a double murder case) concluded it
was a reliable investigative tool and its use in
court was upheld (People v. Tuggle, 1995).