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Abstract

Volume 118 • Number 4

Winter 2005



 


Strategies for verifying false autobiographical memories

KIMBERLEY A. WADE AND MARYANNE GARRY
Victoria University of Wellington


This study examined the types of strategies people use to verify putative childhood memories and the degree to which their preferred strategies are restricted in typical memory implantation studies. We asked subjects to describe a situation in which they recalled a false childhood experience and a hypothetical situation in which they pretended to have developed a false memory after taking part in a memory implantation study. We also asked them how they did (or would) determine the source of the event. We found that subjects relied primarily on other people and cognitive strategies to verify their experiences. These results suggest that laboratory situations cultivate false memories in part because they prevent people from talking to others about the false event, which causes them to rely on less optimal strategies.


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ISSN: 1939-8298


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