Literature DB >> 21177042

The false memory syndrome: experimental studies and comparison to confabulations.

M F Mendez1, I A Fras.   

Abstract

False memories, or recollections that are factually incorrect but strongly believed, remain a source of confusion for both psychiatrists and neurologists. We propose model for false memories based on recent experimental investigations, particularly when analyzed in comparison to confabulations, which are the equivalent of false memories from neurological disease. Studies using the Deese/Roedinger-McDermott experimental paradigm indicate that false memories are associated with the need for complete and integrated memories, self-relevancy, imagination and wish fulfillment, familiarity, emotional facilitation, suggestibility, and sexual content. In comparison, confabulations are associated with the same factors except for emotional facilitation, suggestibility, and sexual content. Both false memories and confabulations have an abnormal sense of certainty for their recollections, and neuroanatomical findings implicate decreased activity in the ventromedial frontal lobe in this certainty. In summary, recent studies of false memories in comparison to confabulations support a model of false memories as internally-generated but suggestible and emotionally-facilitated fantasies or impulses, rather than repressed memories of real events. Furthermore, like confabulations, in order for false memories to occur there must be an attenuation of the normal, nonconscious, right frontal "doubt tag" regarding their certainty. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21177042      PMCID: PMC3143501          DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2010.11.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hypotheses        ISSN: 0306-9877            Impact factor:   1.538


  73 in total

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Authors:  M Moscovitch; B Melo
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  1997-07       Impact factor: 3.139

2.  Mechanisms of spontaneous confabulations: a strategic retrieval account.

Authors:  Asaf Gilboa; Claude Alain; Donald T Stuss; Brenda Melo; Sarah Miller; Morris Moscovitch
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3.  How does negative emotion cause false memories?

Authors:  C J Brainerd; L M Stein; R A Silveira; G Rohenkohl; V F Reyna
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2008-09

4.  Comparison of activation level between true and false items in the DRM paradigm.

Authors:  Vincenzo Paolo Senese; Ida Sergi; Tina Iachini
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2009-07-17

5.  Matching mind to world and vice versa: Functional dissociations between belief and desire mental state processing.

Authors:  Anna Abraham; Hannes Rakoczy; Markus Werning; D Yves von Cramon; Ricarda I Schubotz
Journal:  Soc Neurosci       Date:  2009-08-10       Impact factor: 2.083

6.  Fantasy proneness, but not self-reported trauma is related to DRM performance of women reporting recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse.

Authors:  Elke Geraerts; Elke Smeets; Marko Jelicic; Jaap van Heerden; Harald Merckelbach
Journal:  Conscious Cogn       Date:  2005-09

7.  False rumors and true belief: memory processes underlying children's errant reports of rumored events.

Authors:  Gabrielle F Principe; Brooke Haines; Amber Adkins; Stephanie Guiliano
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2010-07-13

8.  Emotional content of true and false memories.

Authors:  Cara Laney; Elizabeth F Loftus
Journal:  Memory       Date:  2008

9.  Word type effects in false recall: concrete, abstract, and emotion word critical lures.

Authors:  Lisa M Bauer; Erik L Olheiser; Jeanette Altarriba; Nicole Landi
Journal:  Am J Psychol       Date:  2009

10.  "You and your best friend Suzy put slime in Ms. Smollett's desk": producing false memories with self-relevant details.

Authors:  Tracy Desjardins; Alan Scoboria
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2007-12
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  2 in total

1.  Frontolimbic affective bias and false narratives from brain disease.

Authors:  Mario F Mendez
Journal:  Med Hypotheses       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 1.538

2.  The epistemic innocence of clinical memory distortions.

Authors:  Lisa Bortolotti; Ema Sullivan-Bissett
Journal:  Mind Lang       Date:  2018-02-20
  2 in total

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