Scoboria Alan, Lynn Steven Jay, Hessen Joanna, Fisico Stephanie
Department of Psychology, University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.
Memory. 2007 Nov;15(8):801-13. doi: 10.1080/09658210701685266.
We investigated changes in autobiographical belief and memory ratings for childhood events, after informing individuals that forgetting childhood events is common. Participants received false prevalence information (indicating that a particular childhood event occurred frequently in the population) plus a rationale normalizing the forgetting of childhood events; false prevalence information alone; or no manipulation, for one (Study 1) or two (Study 2) unlikely childhood events. Results demonstrated that combining prevalence information and the "forgetting rationale" substantially influenced autobiographical belief ratings, whereas prevalence information alone had no impact (Study 1) or a significantly lesser impact (Study 2) on belief ratings. Prevalence information consistently impacted plausibility ratings. No changes in memory ratings were observed. These results provide further support for a nested relationship between judgements of plausibility, belief, and memory in evaluating the occurrence of autobiographical events. Furthermore, the results suggest that some purported false memory phenomena may instead reflect the development of autobiographical false beliefs in the absence of memory.
在告知个体童年事件遗忘很常见之后,我们调查了他们对童年事件的自传体信念和记忆评分的变化。参与者收到虚假流行信息(表明特定童年事件在人群中频繁发生)以及使童年事件遗忘正常化的理由;仅收到虚假流行信息;或者没有进行任何操纵,针对一(研究1)或两(研究2)个不太可能发生的童年事件。结果表明,将流行信息与“遗忘理由”相结合对自传体信念评分有显著影响,而仅流行信息对信念评分没有影响(研究1)或影响显著较小(研究2)。流行信息始终会影响似真性评分。未观察到记忆评分的变化。这些结果为在评估自传体事件发生时似真性、信念和记忆判断之间的嵌套关系提供了进一步支持。此外,结果表明,一些所谓的错误记忆现象可能反而反映了在没有记忆的情况下自传体错误信念的形成。