Gabbert Fiona, Memon Amina, Wright Daniel B
Division of Psychology, University of Abertay, Dundee DD1 1HG, Scotland.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2006 Jun;13(3):480-5. doi: 10.3758/bf03193873.
When two people see the same event and discuss it, one person's memory report can influence what the other person subsequently claims to remember. We refer to this as memory conformity. In the present article, two factors underlying the memory conformity effect are investigated. First, are there any characteristics of the dialogue that predict memory conformity? Second, is memory conformity differentially affected when information is encountered that omits, adds to, or contradicts originally encoded items? Participants were tested in pairs. The two members of each pair encoded slightly different versions of complex scenes and discussed them prior to an individual free recall test. The discussions were audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed. Our most striking finding was that the witness initiating the discussion was most likely to influence the other witness's memory report. Furthermore, witnesses were most likely to be influenced when an additional (previously unseen) item of information was encountered in the discussion.
当两个人看到同一事件并进行讨论时,一个人的记忆报告可能会影响另一个人随后声称记住的内容。我们将此称为记忆一致性。在本文中,我们研究了记忆一致性效应背后的两个因素。第一,对话中是否存在预测记忆一致性的特征?第二,当遇到遗漏、添加或与原始编码项目相矛盾的信息时,记忆一致性是否会受到不同的影响?参与者成对进行测试。每对中的两名成员对复杂场景的略有不同版本进行编码,并在单独的自由回忆测试之前进行讨论。讨论过程进行了录音、转录和分析。我们最显著的发现是,发起讨论的证人最有可能影响另一名证人的记忆报告。此外,当在讨论中遇到额外的(以前未见过的)信息项时,证人最容易受到影响。