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The relative influence
of attitudes and subjective norms from childhood to adolescence: Between-participant
and within-participant analyses
DAVID
TRAFIMOW, JENNIE BROWN, KRISTEN GRACE, and LAURA A. THOMPSON
New Mexico State University
PASCHAL SHEERAN
University of Sheffield
In 2 experiments, subjects studied word lists drawn from Roediger and McDermott
(1995) and then participated in perceived group recall (PGR) tests that
were intended to lead each subject to believe that she or he was participating
in collaborative recall in a 4-person group. Some of the lists were followed by
PGR tests containing the nonpresented critical word, some lists were followed
by PGR tests not containing the nonpresented critical word, and some lists were
not followed by PGR tests. Subjects then completed individually administered
recall tests and subsequent immediate or delayed recognition tests that required
remember or know judgments. The major finding was that critical words contained
within PGR tests were as likely to be falsely recalled, recognized, and
consciously remembered as original list items. These findings show that false
memories can be socially transmitted.
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