This interest in the ultimate end-product and its application within the legal process in general encourages eyewitness memory investigators to modify their testing procedures continually in an attempt to gain even more information from participants about an event. Indeed, several of the eyewitness memory chapters reflect such attempts.
Beyond the specific contributions of each chapter to the literature on autobiographical and eyewitness memory, the editors hope that the reader will come away with some general observations: the autobiographical and eyewitness memory fields are thriving; these two fields are likely to remain centre stage in the further investigation of memory in natural contexts; although the autobiographical and eyewitness memory chapters have been segregated in these two volumes, the separation is often more arbitrary than real and connections between the two areas abound; the two research traditions are entirely mindful of fundamental laboratory method, research and theory - sometimes drawing their research inspirations from that quarter; and the two fields - though driven largely by everyday memory concerns - can contribute to a more basic understanding of memory at both an empirical and a theoretical level.
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