Memories
Abstract
The fallibility of memory has important implications for various disciplinary fields, as well as societal interests. Research on false memory abounds in terms of the ability of researchers to implant memories for plausible and highly implausible negative events. The extant literature does not currently answer the question of whether memories for positive events can be implanted. Moreover, previous research has attempted, with mixed success, to discriminate between true and false memories employing different objective and subjective measures. Currently, there is still no conclusive way to distinguish between true and false memories. The present study expanded upon the current deficits in the research literature by inducing both positive and negative false memory events in participants. Physiological measures (i.e., skin conductance, heart rate, electromyography, and pulse plethysmography) were employed in an effort to discriminate between participants’ true and false memories. Results indicated that positive and negative events can be implanted at an impressively high rate and with a very simple manipulation. False memories were found to exhibit a greater arousal pattern than true memories and, specifically with electromyography, positive false memories elicited greater arousal patterns than positive true memories.
Faculty Members
- Zane Edward Faulkner - Wright State University School of Professional Psychology, Dayton, OH, USA
- Echo Elizabeth Leaver - Salisbury University, Salisbury, MD, USA
Themes
- Arousal patterns in memory
- Positive vs. negative memories
- False memory implantation
- Memory fallibility
- Physiological measures in memory research
Categories
- Cognitive neuroscience
- Behavioral neuroscience
- Biochemistry, biophysics, and molecular biology nec
- Biological and biomedical sciences
- Neuroscience
- Biochemistry and molecular biology
- Biochemistry, biophysics, and molecular biology
- Psychology
- Neurobiology and neurosciences
- Research and experimental psychology
- Cognitive psychology and psycholinguistics
- Biochemistry
- Biophysics
- Molecular biology
- Experimental psychology