Disowned recollections: denying true experiences undermines belief in occurrence but not judgments of remembering
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Abstract
Recent research findings have illustrated that false memories induced in the laboratory can be dissociated from the beliefs that the events had in fact occurred. In this study we assessed whether this dissociability is a quality peculiar to false memory, or whether it represents a general characteristic of autobiographical memory. To this end we examined whether people can be induced to stop believing in memories for true experiences. Participants observed and performed simple actions, and were later falsely informed that they had not performed some of them-that false memories for these actions had been implanted through the use of fabricated evidence. Before and after receiving this misinformation, participants rated their belief in and memory of performing those actions, other actions that they had also performed, and actions that they had not performed. Whereas the misinformation substantially undermined participants' beliefs in the specific performed actions about which they had been misinformed, it had little effect on their endorsement of remembering those actions. The misinformation thus boosted the proportion of occasions in which participants rated their memories as stronger than their beliefs, and it weakened the correlation between belief and memory ratings. Thus, this study provides the first experimental demonstration of non-believed memories of true experiences. We discuss our findings with reference to the small literature concerning the use of socially-communicated misinformation to undermine event memories, and with reference to the structure of autobiographical memory. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.Citation
Mazzoni G, Clark A, Nash R (2014) 'Disowned recollections: denying true experiences undermines belief in occurrence but not judgments of remembering', Acta Psychologica, 145 (1), pp.139-146.Publisher
ElsevierJournal
Acta PsychologicaAdditional Links
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691813002552Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0001-6918ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.11.007