Literature DB >> 15285128

Conditions affecting the revelation effect for autobiographical memory.

Daniel M Bernstein1, Ryan D Godfrey, Arienne Davison, Elizabeth F Loftus.   

Abstract

In four experiments involving 184 participants, people rated their confidence that particular events had happened in their childhood (e.g., "Broke a window playing ball"). If participants had to unscramble a key word in a phrase just before rating it (e.g., "Broke a nwidwo [window] playing ball"), confidence ratings increased-the revelation effect. However, the pattern of revelation effects depended on the particular way in which participants processed key words (e.g., visualizing vs. counting vowels in the word window) approximately 10 min prior to rating life events that contained those words. Prior exposure to key words never in itself directly affected confidence ratings. These results demonstrate that one can manipulate the revelation effect by altering the processing that participants perform on words prior to unscrambling them. These results also pose difficulties for many accounts of the revelation effect. The major puzzle posed by our present findings is that unscrambling key words increases confidence that an event has happened in childhood, whereas prior exposure to these words does not.

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15285128     DOI: 10.3758/bf03195838

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Cognit        ISSN: 0090-502X


  22 in total

Review 1.  Toward a psychology of memory accuracy.

Authors:  A Koriat; M Goldsmith; A Pansky
Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 24.137

2.  Recollection-based recognition eliminates the revelation effect in memory.

Authors:  D L Westerman
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2000-03

3.  The discrepancy-attribution hypothesis: I. The heuristic basis of feelings of familiarity.

Authors:  B W Whittlesea; L D Williams
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 3.051

4.  ROC curves show that the revelation effect is not a single phenomenon.

Authors:  Michael F Verde; Caren M Rotello
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2004-06

5.  Judgments of remembering: the revelation effect in children and adults.

Authors:  Robert Guttentag; Jennifer Dunn
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2003-10

6.  Using confidence intervals in within-subject designs.

Authors:  G R Loftus; M E Masson
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  1994-12

7.  A decrement-to-familiarity interpretation of the revelation effect from forced-choice tests of recognition memory.

Authors:  J L Hicks; R L Marsh
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 3.051

8.  On the generality of the revelation effect.

Authors:  D L Westerman; R L Greene
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  1996-09       Impact factor: 3.051

9.  The revelation that the revelation effect is not due to revelation.

Authors:  D L Westerman; R L Greene
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  1998-03       Impact factor: 3.051

10.  Biography becomes autobiography: distorting the subjective past.

Authors:  Veronika Nourkova; Daniel M Bernstein; Elizabeth F Loftus
Journal:  Am J Psychol       Date:  2004
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  6 in total

1.  Evoking false beliefs about autobiographical experience.

Authors:  Alan S Brown; Elizabeth J Marsh
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2008-02

Review 2.  The revelation effect: A meta-analytic test of hypotheses.

Authors:  André Aßfalg; Daniel M Bernstein; William Hockley
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2017-12

Review 3.  Retrieval failure versus memory loss in experimental amnesia: definitions and processes.

Authors:  Ralph R Miller; Louis D Matzel
Journal:  Learn Mem       Date:  2006 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.460

4.  Revelation effects in remembering, forecasting, and perspective taking.

Authors:  Deanne L Westerman; Jeremy K Miller; Marianne E Lloyd
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2017-08

5.  The revelation effect for autobiographical memory: a mixture-model analysis.

Authors:  Daniel M Bernstein; Michael E Rudd; Edgar Erdfelder; Ryan Godfrey; Elizabeth F Loftus
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2009-06

6.  Revelation effect in metamemory.

Authors:  Kymberly D Young; Zehra F Peynircioğlu; Timothy J Hohman
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2009-10
  6 in total

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