Photographs can distort memory for the news |
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Authors: | Maryanne Garry Deryn Strange Daniel M. Bernstein Toni Kinzett |
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Affiliation: | 1. Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand;2. Kwantlen University College, British Columbia, Canada;3. University of Washington, Seattle, USA |
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Abstract: | In this experiment, we ask whether photographs can lead to false memories for elements of a newspaper story. Participants played the role of a newspaper editor, identifying minor typographical errors in three newspaper articles and marking the text where they thought an accompanying photo should be placed when the story was printed. The critical article described a hurricane's effects on a coastal region; the story made no mention of personal injury or death. We varied the accompanying critical photo: participants saw either a photo of a village before the hurricane hit or after. In a later memory test, both ‘Before’ and ‘After’ participants were equally good at correctly recognising old statements and rejecting weak lures. However, the ‘After’ participants claimed to have read information describing death and injury 32% of the time. By comparison, ‘Before’ participants claimed to have read these statements only 9% of the time. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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