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False memories in women with self-reported childhood sexual abuse: an empirical study
Authors:Bremner J D  Shobe K K  Kihlstrom J F
Affiliation:Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University and VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut,;Department of Psychology, Yale University,;Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley
Abstract:Although controversy exists about the validity of memories of childhood abuse, little is known about memory function in individuals reporting childhood abuse. This study assessed memories for previously presented words, including the capacity for false memory of critical lures not actually present in the word list, in 63 subjects, including abused women with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), abused women without PTSD, and men and women without abuse or PTSD. Abused women with PTSD had a higher frequency of false recognition memory of critical lures (95%) than abused women without PTSD (78%), nonabused women without PTSD (79%), or nonabused men without PTSD (86%). PTSD women also showed poorer memory for studied words and increased insertions of non-studied words other than critical lures. These findings are consistent with a broad range of memory alterations in abused women with PTSD.
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