A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness

Background: The phenomenon of Change Blindness (CB) has been invoked in a number of fields of psychology, particularly eyewitness misidentification, but also hazard perception in driving behaviour. An extensive review of the existing literature suggested that there has been no systematic review to d...

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Main Authors: Gibbs, Rebecca, Davies, Graham, Chou, Shihning
Format: Article
Published: Taylor & Francis 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36477/
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author Gibbs, Rebecca
Davies, Graham
Chou, Shihning
author_facet Gibbs, Rebecca
Davies, Graham
Chou, Shihning
author_sort Gibbs, Rebecca
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: The phenomenon of Change Blindness (CB) has been invoked in a number of fields of psychology, particularly eyewitness misidentification, but also hazard perception in driving behaviour. An extensive review of the existing literature suggested that there has been no systematic review to date that has investigated what factors affect CB in real-world contexts. Purpose: This article aims to systematically review factors affecting CB when measured using film or real-world paradigms. Method: Six electronic databases were searched for relevant references, alongside four E-theses. Seven experts were contacted for current and unpublished studies. Each study was compared against inclusion criteria, prior to selection and data synthesis. Results: The full search yielded 12,656 publications; 3,654 duplicates were removed and an additional 8,693 irrelevant publications were excluded. A further 295 publications were removed for not meeting the inclusion criteria. One conference abstract was excluded as contact with the authors produced no response. A total of 13 articles that met the criteria were reviewed. Conclusion: Increasing attention, the saliency of the changed object and spatial violations significantly reduce CB, specifically when measured using the real-world and film paradigms; these have implications for forensic psychology practice relevant to innocent bystanders and eyewitness misidentifications, and witnesses making positive identifications. However, a number of methodological limitations were identified which should be taken into account in designing future research.
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spelling nottingham-364772020-05-04T18:12:54Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36477/ A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness Gibbs, Rebecca Davies, Graham Chou, Shihning Background: The phenomenon of Change Blindness (CB) has been invoked in a number of fields of psychology, particularly eyewitness misidentification, but also hazard perception in driving behaviour. An extensive review of the existing literature suggested that there has been no systematic review to date that has investigated what factors affect CB in real-world contexts. Purpose: This article aims to systematically review factors affecting CB when measured using film or real-world paradigms. Method: Six electronic databases were searched for relevant references, alongside four E-theses. Seven experts were contacted for current and unpublished studies. Each study was compared against inclusion criteria, prior to selection and data synthesis. Results: The full search yielded 12,656 publications; 3,654 duplicates were removed and an additional 8,693 irrelevant publications were excluded. A further 295 publications were removed for not meeting the inclusion criteria. One conference abstract was excluded as contact with the authors produced no response. A total of 13 articles that met the criteria were reviewed. Conclusion: Increasing attention, the saliency of the changed object and spatial violations significantly reduce CB, specifically when measured using the real-world and film paradigms; these have implications for forensic psychology practice relevant to innocent bystanders and eyewitness misidentifications, and witnesses making positive identifications. However, a number of methodological limitations were identified which should be taken into account in designing future research. Taylor & Francis 2016-09-09 Article PeerReviewed Gibbs, Rebecca, Davies, Graham and Chou, Shihning (2016) A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness. Crime Psychology Review . ISSN 2374-4006 Change blindness eyewitness identification perception systematic review http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/Ugu9vwtTpq2i7IuzebWX/full doi:10.1080/23744006.2016.1228799 doi:10.1080/23744006.2016.1228799
spellingShingle Change blindness
eyewitness identification
perception
systematic review
Gibbs, Rebecca
Davies, Graham
Chou, Shihning
A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title_full A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title_fullStr A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title_short A systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
title_sort systematic review on factors affecting the likelihood of change blindness
topic Change blindness
eyewitness identification
perception
systematic review
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36477/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36477/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36477/