Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
920052 Acta Psychologica 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A longstanding question in false memory research is whether children’s implanted false memories represent actual memory traces or merely result from compliance. The current study examined this question using a response latency based deception task. Forty-five 8-year-old children received narratives about a true (first day at school) and false event (hot air balloon ride). Across two interviews, 58/32% of the participants developed a partial/full false memory. Interestingly, these children also showed higher false recall on an unrelated DRM paradigm compared to children without a false memory. The crucial finding, however, was that the results of the deception task revealed that children with partial and full false memories were faster to confirm than to deny statements relating to the false event. This indicates that children’s implanted false memories reflect actual memory traces, and are unlikely to be explained by mere compliance.

► Examination whether children's false memory reflects memory traces or compliance. ► Using a response latency deception task. ► Results show that false memories are sustained by memory traces.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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