Results 171 to 180 of about 141,164 (196)
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Recovered memories and false memories.

Psychoanalytic Psychology, 1997
Introduction - what are memories? the troublesome unknowns about trauma and recovered memories events spoken and unspoken - implications of language and memory development for the recovered memory debate the recovered memory debate - a cognitive neuroscience perspective suffering from reminiscences - exhumed memory, implicit memory, and the return of ...
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Schizotypy and false memory

Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 2009
Using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm the present study examined the relationship between schizotypy and recognition memory. Participants scoring in the upper and lower quartile ranges for schizotypy (Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire brief version; SPQ-B) and on each of the SPQ-B subscales (cognitive-perceptual, interpersonal and ...
Neil Dagnall, Andrew Parker
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False memory? False memory syndrome? The so‐called false memory syndrome?

Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 1996
The current reemergence of clinicians’ attention to the sequelae of childhood sexual abuse has been met by a powerful critical opposition. The criticisms often extend to many forms of psychotherapy and to psychoanalytic treatments of trauma. This article situates the debate in its historical context.
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False memories and confabulation

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1998
Memory distortions range from the benign (thinking you mailed a check that you only thought about mailing), to the serious (confusing what you heard after a crime with what you actually saw), to the fantastic (claiming you piloted a spaceship). We review theoretical ideas and empirical evidence about the source monitoring processes underlying both true
Marcia K. Johnson, Carol L. Raye
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Repressed memory and false memory

Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, 1996
Both the popular media and professional literature have presented many accounts of repressed memory and false memory in the past 5 years. Repressed memory occurs when trauma is too severe to be kept in conscious memory, and is removed by repression or dissociation or both.
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False memories and aging

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1997
Although memory processes and systems usually operate reliably, they are sometimes prone to distortions and illusions. Here we review evidence indicating that cognitive aging is often associated with increased susceptibility to various kinds of false recollections.
Kenneth A. Norman   +2 more
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Creating False Memories

2022
Projekt für M4 Kurs an der Fernuni im ...
von Holzen, Micha   +1 more
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False memory syndrome

The Lancet, 1995
The phenomenon known as false memory syndrome has sparked controversy within the field of psychotherapy and is threatening the credibility of the entire profession. False memory syndrome describes the "recovery" of vivid memories which did not take place. Affected adult patients accuse their parents of childhood sexual abuse which had been "forgotten"
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Creating False Memories

Scientific American, 1997
Researchers are showing how suggestion and imagination can be used to create "memories" of events that did not actually occur.
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Motivated False Memory

Journal of Political Economy, 2020
People often forget and sometimes fantasize. This paper reports a large-scale experiment on memory errors and their relation to preferential traits including time preference, attitudes toward risk ...
Soo Hong Chew   +5 more
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