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Believing in dissociative amnesia relates to claiming it: a survey of people’s experiences and beliefs about dissociative amnesia

Ivan Mangiulli, Marko Jelícic, Lawrence Patihis, Henry Otgaar

2021Memory23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 102) claimed to have experienced dissociative amnesia. Some claims pertained to amnesia for traumatic autobiographical experiences (e.g., sexual assault), while other claims reflected memory loss for experiences that can be regarded as non-traumatic or non-stressful (e.g., dissociative amnesia for an anniversary). Importantly, many participants believed in the existence of dissociative amnesia, and those who claimed dissociative amnesia indicated even more belief in this phenomenon than the rest of the sample. Finally, many participants indicated to have at least once claimed to have feigned memory loss in their life, and that they experienced some form of forgetting when trying to retrieve events for which they lied upon. Overall, our findings suggest that claiming dissociative amnesia goes hand in hand with believing in dissociative amnesia.

Topics & Concepts

AmnesiaPsychologyForgettingDissociativePopulationPsychiatryCognitive psychologyMedicineEnvironmental healthPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchEmpathy and Medical Education
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