In addition to the well placed points by gumboot above, this New York Times article is very relevant in relation to the Flight 93 eyewitnesses and "ear-witnesses":
Ideas & Trends; For Air Crash Detectives, Seeing Isn't Believing
A quote from the article:
A must read, especially for persons like TC329.
Ideas & Trends; For Air Crash Detectives, Seeing Isn't Believing
A quote from the article:
None of this is surprising, said Dr. Charles R. Honts, a professor of psychology at Boise State University and the editor of the Journal of Credibility Assessment and Witness Psychology. ''Eyewitness memory is reconstructive,'' said Dr. Honts, who is not associated with the safety board. ''The biggest mistake you can make is to think about a memory like it's a videotape; there's not a permanent record there.''
The problem, he said, is that witnesses instinctively try to match events with their past experiences: ''How many plane crashes have you witnessed in real life? Probably none. But in the movies? A lot. In the movies, there's always smoke and there's always fire.''
A must read, especially for persons like TC329.
