Litcius/Paper detail

Contact Tracing: A Memory Task With Consequences for Public Health

Maryanne Garry, Lorraine Hope, Rachel Zajac, Ayesha J Verrall, Jamie M. Robertson

2020Perspectives on Psychological Science29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the battle for control of coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), we have few weapons. Yet contact tracing is among the most powerful. Contact tracing is the process by which public-health officials identify people, or contacts, who have been exposed to a person infected with a pathogen or another hazard. For all its power, though, contact tracing yields a variable level of success. One reason is that contact tracing's ability to break the chain of transmission is only as effective as the proportion of contacts who are actually traced. In part, this proportion turns on the quality of the information that infected people provide, which makes human memory a crucial part of the efficacy of contact tracing. Yet the fallibilities of memory, and the challenges associated with gathering reliable information from memory, have been grossly underestimated by those charged with gathering it. We review the research on witnesses and investigative interviewing, identifying interrelated challenges that parallel those in contact tracing, as well as approaches for addressing those challenges.

Topics & Concepts

Contact tracingTracingBattlePsychologyInterviewInternet privacyTask (project management)Computer scienceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)MedicineDiseaseSociologyEngineeringGeographyInfectious disease (medical specialty)AnthropologyPathologySystems engineeringArchaeologyOperating systemCOVID-19 Digital Contact TracingMisinformation and Its ImpactsData-Driven Disease Surveillance