Library/PT 121/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Leading questions—questions that hint at a specific answer—can change what witnesses remember, whether the question is asked on purpose or by accident. Even if judges stop leading questions in court, earlier questions from police, lawyers, reporters, or others can already have altered a witness’s memory. Studies show we only clearly store details we pay attention to, and suggested details that don’t directly conflict with our memory are often accepted either as confirmations or as fills for missing pieces. Memories fade over time, so small or side details (like a shirt color) are especially likely to be filled in by suggestion—even though those details can later be very important in deciding who did what.

Logic Breakdown

Note that the passage emphasizes contamination of memories by leading questions introduced before trial (by police, lawyers, reporters, etc.); choose the option that best helps detect or correct for pretrial contamination of testimony.

Passage Stimulus

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21.

It can be reasonably inferred from the passage that which one of the following, if it were effectively implemented, would most increase the justice system's ability to prevent leading questions from causing mistaken court decisions?

Correct Answer
E
The passage says that "their exclusion from the courtroom by no means eliminates the remote effects of earlier leading questions on eyewitness testimony" and that "the beliefs about an event that a witness brings to the courtroom may often be adulterated by the effects of leading questions that were introduced intentionally or unintentionally by lawyers, police investigators, reporters, or others with whom the witness has already interacted." It further explains that "if subtly introduced new data involving remembered events do not actively conflict with our stored memory data, we tend to process such new data similarly whether they correspond to details as we remember them, or to gaps in those details," and that "The farther removed from the event, the greater the chance of a vague or incomplete recollection and the greater the likelihood of newly suggested information blending with original memories." Accurate transcripts of all pretrial interrogations would reveal prior leading suggestions and thus allow the justice system to identify and discount testimony likely contaminated by those earlier suggestions, reducing mistaken decisions.
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