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Do False Memories Look Real? Evidence That People Struggle to Identify Rich False Memories of Committing Crime and Other Emotional Events

Julia Shaw

2020Frontiers in Psychology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Two studies examined whether people could identify rich false memories. Each participant in both studies was presented with two videos, one of a person recalling a true emotional memory, and one of the same person recalling a false memory. These videos were filmed during a study which involved implanting rich false memories (Shaw & Porter, 2015). The false memories in the videos either involve committing a crime (assault, or assault with a weapon) or other highly emotional events (animal attack, or losing a large sum of money) during adolescence. In study 1, participants (n = 124) were no better than chance at accurately classifying false memories (61.29% accurate), or false memories of committing crime (53.33% accurate). In study 2, participants (n = 82) participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions, where they only had access to the (i) audio account of the memory with no video, (ii) video account with no audio, or (iii) the full audio-visual accounts. False memories were classified correctly by 32.14% of the audio-only group, 45.45% of the video-only group, and 53.13% of the audio-visual group. This research provides evidence that naïve judges are not able to reliably identify false memories of emotional or criminal events, or differentiate true from true memories. These findings are likely to be of particular interest to those working in legal and criminal justice settings.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyFalse memoryEconomic JusticeCognitive psychologySocial psychologyRecallEconomicsNeoclassical economicsMemory Processes and InfluencesDeception detection and forensic psychologyInterpreting and Communication in Healthcare