Interactions between spontaneous instantiations to the basic level and post-event suggestions |
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Authors: | Ainat Pansky Einat Tenenboim |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology , University of Haifa , Haifa, Israel pansky@research.haifa.ac.il;3. Department of Psychology , University of Haifa , Haifa, Israel |
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Abstract: | Extensive research shows that post-event suggestions can distort the memory for a target event. In this study we examined the effect of such suggestions as they interact with the products of a spontaneous memory process: instantiation of abstract information to an intermediate level of abstractness, the basic level (Pansky & Koriat, 2004 Pansky, A. and Koriat, A. 2004. The basic-level convergence effect in memory distortions. Psychological Science, 15: 52–59. [Crossref] , [Google Scholar]). Participants read a narrative containing items presented at the superordinate level (e.g., FRUIT), were exposed to suggestions that referred to these items at the basic level (e.g., APPLE), and were finally asked to recall the original items. We found that the tendency to instantiate spontaneously in the control (non-misleading) condition, particularly over time, increased following exposure to suggestions that were likely to coincide with those instantiations. Exposure to such suggestions, either immediately or following a 24-hour delay, reduced subsequent correct recall of the original items only if the suggested information coincided with the information one tends to instantiate spontaneously in a given context. Suggestibility, in this case, was particularly pronounced and phenomenologically compelling in terms of remember/know judgements. The findings are taken to imply that effects of post-event suggestions can be understood in terms of the constructive processes that set the stage for their occurrence. |
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Keywords: | False memory Misinformation effect Suggestibility Instantiation Constructive memory |
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