Memories people no longer believe in can still affect them in helpful and harmful ways
People can come to “remember” experiences they never had, and these false memories—much like memories for real experiences—can serve a variety of helpful and harmful functions. Sometimes, though, people realize one of their memories is false, and retract their belief in it. These “retracted memories...
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Published in | Memory & cognition Vol. 50; no. 6; pp. 1319 - 1335 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
New York
Springer US
01.08.2022
Springer Nature B.V |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0090-502X 1532-5946 1532-5946 |
DOI | 10.3758/s13421-022-01328-9 |
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Abstract | People can come to “remember” experiences they never had, and these false memories—much like memories for real experiences—can serve a variety of helpful and harmful functions. Sometimes, though, people realize one of their memories is false, and retract their belief in it. These “retracted memories” continue to have many of the same phenomenological characteristics as their believed memories. But can they also continue to serve functions? Across four experiments, we asked subjects to rate the extent to which their retracted memories serve helpful and harmful functions and compared these functions with those served by “genuine” autobiographical memories. People rated their retracted memories as serving both helpful and harmful functions, much like their genuine memories. In addition, we found only weak relationships between people’s belief in their memories and the extent to which those memories served perceived functions. These results suggest memories can serve functions even in the absence of belief and highlight the potential for false memories to affect people’s thinking and behavior even after people have retracted them. |
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AbstractList | People can come to “remember” experiences they never had, and these false memories—much like memories for real experiences—can serve a variety of helpful and harmful functions. Sometimes, though, people realize one of their memories is false, and retract their belief in it. These “retracted memories” continue to have many of the same phenomenological characteristics as their believed memories. But can they also continue to serve functions? Across four experiments, we asked subjects to rate the extent to which their retracted memories serve helpful and harmful functions and compared these functions with those served by “genuine” autobiographical memories. People rated their retracted memories as serving both helpful and harmful functions, much like their genuine memories. In addition, we found only weak relationships between people’s belief in their memories and the extent to which those memories served perceived functions. These results suggest memories can serve functions even in the absence of belief and highlight the potential for false memories to affect people’s thinking and behavior even after people have retracted them. People can come to "remember" experiences they never had, and these false memories-much like memories for real experiences-can serve a variety of helpful and harmful functions. Sometimes, though, people realize one of their memories is false, and retract their belief in it. These "retracted memories" continue to have many of the same phenomenological characteristics as their believed memories. But can they also continue to serve functions? Across four experiments, we asked subjects to rate the extent to which their retracted memories serve helpful and harmful functions and compared these functions with those served by "genuine" autobiographical memories. People rated their retracted memories as serving both helpful and harmful functions, much like their genuine memories. In addition, we found only weak relationships between people's belief in their memories and the extent to which those memories served perceived functions. These results suggest memories can serve functions even in the absence of belief and highlight the potential for false memories to affect people's thinking and behavior even after people have retracted them.People can come to "remember" experiences they never had, and these false memories-much like memories for real experiences-can serve a variety of helpful and harmful functions. Sometimes, though, people realize one of their memories is false, and retract their belief in it. These "retracted memories" continue to have many of the same phenomenological characteristics as their believed memories. But can they also continue to serve functions? Across four experiments, we asked subjects to rate the extent to which their retracted memories serve helpful and harmful functions and compared these functions with those served by "genuine" autobiographical memories. People rated their retracted memories as serving both helpful and harmful functions, much like their genuine memories. In addition, we found only weak relationships between people's belief in their memories and the extent to which those memories served perceived functions. These results suggest memories can serve functions even in the absence of belief and highlight the potential for false memories to affect people's thinking and behavior even after people have retracted them. |
Author | Nash, Robert A. Burnell, Ryan Umanath, Sharda Garry, Maryanne |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Ryan surname: Burnell fullname: Burnell, Ryan organization: School of Psychology, University of Waikato – sequence: 2 givenname: Robert A. surname: Nash fullname: Nash, Robert A. organization: School of Psychology, Aston University – sequence: 3 givenname: Sharda surname: Umanath fullname: Umanath, Sharda organization: Department of Psychological Science, Claremont McKenna College – sequence: 4 givenname: Maryanne orcidid: 0000-0001-6267-8472 surname: Garry fullname: Garry, Maryanne email: maryanne.garry@waikato.ac.nz organization: School of Psychology, University of Waikato |
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Keywords | Memory functions Autobiographical memory False memory |
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Snippet | People can come to “remember” experiences they never had, and these false memories—much like memories for real experiences—can serve a variety of helpful and... People can come to "remember" experiences they never had, and these false memories-much like memories for real experiences-can serve a variety of helpful and... |
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StartPage | 1319 |
SubjectTerms | Behavioral Science and Psychology Cognitive Psychology Psychology |
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Title | Memories people no longer believe in can still affect them in helpful and harmful ways |
URI | https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13421-022-01328-9 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35701575 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2701144704 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2676923206 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC9365748 |
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