Research Interests
As a psychological scientist, I have studied human memory. My earliest studies demonstrated that innocuous procedures could alter memories of past events. In early experiments, experimental witnesses to an event were later interviewed with questions that insinuated novel (and incorrect) information into the memory record of the event. For example, after watching a simulated auto accident, the question "Did another car pass the red Datsun while it was at the stop sign?" led interviewees who had seen a yield sign to later recall having seen a stop sign at the intersection. The contamination or distortion of memory through post-event suggestion became known in the field of cognitive psychology as the "Misinformation Effect." In later research, I developed paradigms for exploring extreme instances of a malleable memory. In one study (called the 'lost in the mall' study) I demonstrated the ease with which one could create, in adults, 'recovered' unpleasant memories of having been, as a child, separated from a parent on a shopping trip, and after great distress being rescued and reunited with the family. My later studies showed how imagination, or exposure to other people's stories, or dream interpretation, or a multitude of suggestive techniques could lead people to have wholly false beliefs and memories about their past. My desire to understand the processes by which people develop "rich false memories" has motivated much of research.
Membership Type
Member
Election Year
2004
Primary Section
Section 52: Psychological and Cognitive Sciences
Secondary Section
Section 53: Social and Political Sciences