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Weird Memory Effects Kimberley Clow

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Presentation on theme: "Weird Memory Effects Kimberley Clow"— Presentation transcript:

1 Weird Memory Effects Kimberley Clow kclow2@uwo.ca http://instruct.uwo.ca/psychology/130/

2 Outline Reproductive Memory Schemas –Scripts Technical vs. Content Memory False Memories Repressed / Recovered Memories Flashbulb Memories

3 Context Effects on Comprehension Earlier words prime proper interpretation of later words. –A common example of semantic priming. Primed –The kids’ first arithmetic lesson taught them to count –The vampire was disguised as a handsome count. Ambiguous Target –We had trouble keeping track of the count

4 Memory is NOT Exact! Reproductive Memory –A highly accurate, verbatim recording of an event Reconstructive Memory –Remembering by combining elements of experience with existing knowledge In “The Princess Bride”, does Inigo tell Vizzini –You say that so often, I do not think it means what you think it means –You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means

5 The Seven Sins of Memory

6 Bartlett’s War of the Ghosts English students told a Native Indian story Memory for the story tested across time –Omissions and normalization Results indicated that memory is reconstructive –Leveling making story simpler –Sharpening overemphasizing certain details –Assimilating changing details to fit what we think

7 Scripts What is your Restaurant script? –What happens first? –And then?

8 Recognition Which of the following sentences was/were shown earlier? –The ants were on the table –The ants ate the jelly on the table –The old car pulled the trailer –The car climbed the steep hill

9 Technical vs. Content Accuracy Technical Accuracy –Recalling or recognizing exactly what was experienced –Generally quite poor Content Accuracy –Recalling or recognizing the meaning or content of what was experienced –Generally quite accurate

10 Recall

11 Car Accident

12 Loftus & Colleagues Estimate how fast the cars were going –When they “hit” each other –When they “smashed” each other Did you see the broken glass?

13 Why Does This Happen? Possible Explanations –Memory Impairment –The Response Bias Explanation –Source Misattribution –Misinformation Acceptance

14 Lost in the Mall Can you produce false memories through suggestion? –Asked to write about 4 memories 3 real 1 false (lost in mall) –When told one was incorrect, picked one of the real memories

15 Lost Again Replicated on a group of people –What memories did people remember? 7 out of 24 remembered the false event –How are the events remembered? True memories described more True memories rated more clear False memories’ clarity increased over time –Can they choose the false memory? 19 out of 24 figured out which was false Process of elimination?

16 One Person’s False Memory... “I vaguely, vague, I mean this is very vague, remember the lady helping me and Tim and my mom doing something else, but I don't remember crying. I mean I can remember a hundred times crying..... I just remember bits and pieces of it. I remember being with the lady. I remember going shopping. I don't think I, I don't remember the sunglasses part.“ "Well, it can't be Slasher, 'cause I know that he ran up in the...the chimney and I know that that cat got smashed and I know that we got robbed so it had to be that mall one.” "..I totally remember walking around in those dressing rooms and my mom not being in the section she said she'd be in. You know what I mean?"

17 Individual Differences Some people are more susceptible to misinformation than others –7 out of 24 participants People high at risk for misinformation acceptance have –Poor general memory –High scores on imagery vividness –High empathy scores

18 Recovered Memories of Abuse A person remembers today, that 20 years ago, someone sexually abused them Traumatic memory was repressed and is now recovered –often under hypnosis in therapy Validity of recovered memories? Empirical evidence for Freudian repression?

19 Model of Recovered Memories?

20 Questions Is there evidence for repressed memories? –Much evidence that emotional events are remembered better, not forgotten Post-traumatic stress disorder –Are these memories real or false? If there is repression, how does it differ from normal forgetting?

21 Evidence for Suppression? Learned 40 unrelated word pairs –ordeal-roach Respond Condition –Think of the word paired with ORDEAL… Suppression Condition –Do NOT think of word paired with MEASURE… Memory for target words decreased with the number of suppressions

22

23 Evidence? Most cases are unclear –Susan Nason murder Eileen Fanklin: “I remember my father did it.” George Franklin denies it and no evidence links him Research reports 4 cases with reasonably good evidence that –A memory for abuse was recovered –The remembered event actually happened –The event was previously forgotten

24 Recovered Memories Recovery Experiences –Sudden –Startling –Emotional –Initiated by related retrieval cues encoding specificity? Forgetting –May have been over-estimated –Prior remembering not as emotional

25 Counter Example Adults recall of horrific abuse at hands of Satanists –Murder, torture, sexual abuse, eating babies FBI could find no evidence –Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)? –Repressed memory? Therapists used highly suggestive techniques –drugs, hypnosis, suggest that there might be non- remembered abuse Therapy led to false memories?

26 Physically Possible? A possible physiological explanation of repression –Stress  release of glucocorticoids (steroid hormones) –Glucocorticoids  kill hippocampal neurons –Hippocampus brain area related to memory Hippocampus reduced in abused vs. non- abused women –Same for post-traumatic stress disorder –BUT no direct evidence links glucocorticoids to repression of traumatic memories.

27 To Sum Up Repressed Memories –More questions, than answers –Child abuse and sexual assault are big problems that are very traumatic Some evidence that memories of such abuse can be forgotten and then recovered –Memories can also be inaccurate or manufactured Especially when under hypnosis or otherwise being given suggestions or directed questions –Can’t tell if a memory is true or false without independent corroboration

28 Consequences of Memory Effects Think of how all of this might affect the courts, and specifically eye witness testimony –Schema effects, false memories, repressed memories, recovered memories Memory is suggestible: –people’s memory can be altered and influenced by the knowledge they have when they encounter the information, and by the information they encounter afterwards Is there anything we can do to minimize these effects?

29 Cognitive Interview Encourage eyewitness to produce her own memory cues and minimize direct questions Get her to mentally recreate the context of the crime –environmental and internal (e.g., mood state) info She should report everything she can remember –even if info is fragmented Alter how the info is reported –List details in various orders –List details from various perspectives

30 Flashbulb Memories Flashbulb memories are –Vivid –Detailed –Long-lasting –Memories we will “never forget” –Personally meaningful Personal Examples –Your first date –The death of someone close to you Princess Diana

31 Six ‘Canonical’ Categories Write an account of a flashbulb memory –Place where were you? –Ongoing event what were you doing? –Informant who told you / how did you find out? –Affect in others –Own affect –Aftermath

32 Accuracy of Flashbulb Memories Neisser & Harsch (1992) –Ask people to remember what they were doing when they first heard about the Challenger shuttle explosion –Asked them again 2½ years later –Measured the similarity of both memory reports Same memory reported very differently over time

33 January, 1986 “I was in my religion class and some people walked in and started talking about the [explosion]. I didn’t know any details except that it had exploded and the school teacher’s students had all been watching, which I thought was so sad. Then after class I went to my room and watched the TV program talking about it and I got all the details from that.”

34 September, 1988 “When I first heard about the explosion I was sitting in my freshman dorm room with my roommate and we were watching TV. It came on a news flash and were we both totally shocked. I was really upset and went upstairs to talk to a friend of mine and then I called my parents.”


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