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Source attributions and false memories: a test of the demand characteristics account
Authors:Lampinen J M  Neuschatz J S  Payne D G
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;(2) Department of Psychology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana
Abstract:When lists of related words are presented to subjects, they sometimes recall or recognize nonpresented words related to those lists (critical lures). In fact, subjects sometimes claim to remember which of two speakers said the critical lures. We examined whether this finding could be accounted for by demand characteristics. If subjects’ willingness to make source attributions to critical lures reflects experimental demand, one would predict that subjects should be willing to change and should have little confidence in these attributions. Subjects made more attributions, were less likely to change their attributions, and were more confident in their attributions for critical lures than for unrelated distractors. Subjects had even more confidence in the attributions that they made for words that had actually been presented, and they were even less likely to change these attributions. These findings suggest that false memories are quite compelling but that they are also subtly different from true memories.
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