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A re-examination of the misinformation effect by means of visual and verbal recognition tests
Authors:Masako Yamashita
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University, Sakurajosui, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo 156, Japan
Abstract:Abstract: Two experiments were carried out to investigate the factors that produce the misinformation effect (Loftus, 1979a). Experiment 1 of the present study using the visual recognition test was a replica of Experiment 1 of Loftus, Miller, and Burns (1978). The misinformation effect was not found. Experiment 2 differed from Experiment 1 in the following respects: the modality of recognition test was varied between visual and verbal; memorableness (ease of memorization) of the critical objects was varied. The results of Experiment 2 suggest that the original visual memory might be more likely to be recovered with a visual recognition test than with a verbal recognition test, and that the postevent information would not necessarily interfere effectively with memory of an original object of too high or low memorableness, while it works well on objects of intermediate memorableness.
Keywords:misinformation effect    eyewitness memory    memorableness    visual versus verbal recognition tests
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