False Memory Reading Group

Spring 2001

Every reminiscence is colored by today's being what it is, and therefore a deceptive point of view.

--Albert Einstein


Anderson, S.J., Cohen, G. & Taylor, S. (2000). Rewriting the past: Some factors affecting the variability of personal memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 435-454.

Banks, W.P. (2000). Recognition and source memory as multivariate decision processes. Psychological Science, 11, 267-273.

Bremner, J.D., Shobe, K.K. & Kihlstrom, J.F. (2000). False memories in women with self-reported childhood sexual abuse: An empirical study. Psychological Science, 11, 333-337.

Bruce, D., Dolan, A. & Phillips-Grant, K. (2000). On the transition from childhood amnesia to the recall of personal memories. Psychological Science, 11, 360-364.

Budson, A.E., Daffner, K.R., Desikan, R. & Schacter, D.L. (2000). When false recognition is unopposed by true recognition: Gist-based memory distortion in Alzheimer's disease, Neuropsychology, 14, 277-287.

Levin, D.T. (2000). Race as a Visual Feature: Using Visual Search and Perceptual Discrimination Tasks to Understand Face Categories and the Cross-Race Recognition Deficit. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General,

Mitchell, K.J., Johnson, M.K., Raye, C.L., Mather, M. & D'Esposito, M. (2000). Aging and reflective processes of working memory: Binding and test load deficits. Psychology and Aging, 15, 527-541.

Raye, C.L., Johnson, M.K., Mitchell, K.J., Nolde, S.F. & D'Esposito, M. (2000). fMRI investigations of left and right PFC contributions to episodic remembering. Psychobiology, 28, 197-206.

Smith, S.M., Ward, T.B., Tindell, D.R. & Sifonis, C.M. (2000). Category structure and created memories. Memory and Cognition, 28, 386-395.

Smith, S.M., Lindsay, R.C.L. & Pryke, S. (2000). Postdictors of eyewitness errors: Can false identifications be diagnosed? Journal of Applied Psychology, 85, 542-550.

Terrance, C.A., Matheson, K., Allard, C. & Schnarr, J.A. (2000). The role of expectation and memory-retrieval techniques in the constructions of beliefs about past events.Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 361-377.
 
Wallace, W.P., Malone, C.P. & Spoo, A.D. (2000).   Implicit word activation during prerecognition processing: False recognition and remember/know judgments. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 7, 149-157

Waterman, A.H., Blades, M. & Spencer, C. (2000). Do children try to answer nonsensical questions? British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 18, 211-225.

Wixted, J.T. & Stretch, V. (2000). The case against a criterion-shift account of false memory. Psychological Review, 107, 368-376.


Click on the button () next to the article to see the summary

Important Legal Disclaimer: The preceding are articles we read together in the Lampinen Lab Spring 2001 false memory reading group. By clicking on the button next to the article you can see the summary of that article. The summary was prepared by the student presenting that article and it is of course the case that the views expressed in the summary do not necessarily represent the views of the reading group as a whole, Dr. Lampinen, the Lampinen Lab, Hugo's, the University of Arkansas, the University of Liege, the Razorback Football or Basketball teams (although we're not sure of the tennis squad), people living down the street from us, our extended families, the three surviving Beatles, or anyone else for that matter except for the student who wrote the summary (and they don't necessarily believe what they wrote either).


University of Arkansas

Department of Psychology

 

Graduate Program in Experimental Psychology

Lampinen Lab

False Memory Reading Group

 

Lampinen Lab Publications