|
False Memories & Eyewitness
Testimony Bibliography |
The false
memory and eyewitness testimony master bibliography is maintained by the False Memory Lab at the University of Arkansas. The
bibliography includes all papers that we have cited in our own recent work,
including in student's theses, as well as all papers read in the false
memory reading group. |
Ackil, J.K.
& Zaragoza, M.S. (1998). Memorial consequences
of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories. Developmental
Psychology, 34, 1358-1372.
Anastasi,
J.S.,
Anderson, S.J., Cohen, G. & Taylor,
S. (2000). Rewriting the past: Some factors affecting the variability of
personal memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 435-454.
Arndt, J. & Hirshman, E. (1998).
True and false recognition in MINERVA2: Explanations from a global matching
perspective. Journal of Memory & Language, 39, 371-391.
Baars, B.J. (1998). In the
theatre of consciousness: Global workspace theory, a rigorous scientific theory
of consciousness. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 4, 292-309.
Banks, W.P. (2000). Recognition and
source memory as multivariate decision processes. Psychological Science, 11,
267-273.
Benjamin,
A.S. (2001). On the dual effects of repetition on false recognition. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27, 941-947.
Ben-Shakhar, G. & Elaad, E.
(2003). The validity of psychophysiological detection
of information with the Guilty Knowledge Test: A meta-analytic review. Journal
of Applied Psychology, 88, 131-151.
Bernstein, D.M., Whittlesea, B.W.A.,
& Loftus, E.F. (2002). Increasing confidence in remote autobiographical
memory and general knowledge: Extensions of the revelation effect. Memory
& Cognition, 30, 432-438.
Bidrose, S. & Goodman, G.S. (2000).
Testimony and evidence: A scientific case study of memory for child sexual
abuse. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 197-213.
Bjorklund, D.F., Bjorklund, B.R., Brown, R.D. & Cassel,
W.S. (1998). Children's susceptibility to repeated questions: How
misinformation changes children's answers and their minds. Applied
Developmental Science, 2, 99-111.
Bjorklund, D.F.,
Bodner, G.E. & Lindsay, D.S. (2003).
Remembering and knowing in context. Journal of Memory & Language, 48,
563-580.
Bonebakker, A. E., Bonke, B., Klein, M. D., Wolters,
G., Stijnen, T., Passchier,
J., & Merikle, P. M. (1996). Information
processing during general anesthesia: Evidence for unconscious memory. Memory
& Cognition, 24, 766-776.
Bower, G.H., Black,
J.B., & Turner, T.J. (1979). Scripts in memory for text. Cognitive
Psychology, 11, 177-220.
Brainerd, C. J. & Reyna, V. F. (1998). Fuzzy-trace theory and children's
false memories. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 71, 81-129.
Brainerd, C. J. & Reyna, V. F. (1998). When things that were
never experienced are easier to "remember" than things that were. Psychological
Science, 9, 484-489.
Brainerd, C. J., Payne, D. G., &
Wright, R. (2003). Phantom recall. Journal of Memory & Language, 48,
445-467.
Brainerd, C. J., Reyna, V. F. & Mojardin,
A. H. (1999). Conjoint recognition. Psychological Review, 106, 160-179.
Brainerd, C. J., Reyna, V. F., & Kneer,
R. (1995). False-recognition reversal: When similarity is distinctive. Journal
of Memory and Language, 34, 157-185.
Brainerd, C. J., Reyna, V. F., Payne, D.
G., Wright, R. (2002). Dual-retrieval processes in free and associative recall.
Journal of Memory & Language, 46, 120-152.
Brainerd, C. J., Wright, R., Reyna, V. F., & Mojardin, A. H. (2001). Conjoint recognition and phantom
recollection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and
Cognition, 27, 307-327.
Brainerd, C.J. &
Reyna, V.F. (2001). Fuzzy-trace theory: Dual processes in memory, reasoning,
and cognitive neuroscience. Advances in Child Development and Behavior, 6, 359-364.
Brainerd,
C.J. & Reyna, V.F. (2002). Recollection rejection: How children edit their
false memories. Developmental Psychology, 38, 156-172.
Brainerd, C.J., Reyna, V.F. & Forrest, T.J. (2002). Are
young children susceptible to the false-memory illusion? Child
Development, 73,1363-1377.
Bredart, S. (2000). When false memories do not
occur: Not thinking of the lure or remembering that it was not heard? Memory,
8, 123-128.
Brédart,
S., Lampinen, J.M. & Defeldre,
A.C. (2003). Phenomenal characteristics in cryptomnesia.
Memory, 11, 1-11
Bremner,
J.D., Shobe, K.K. & Kihlstrom,
J.F. (2000). False memories in women with self-reported childhood sexual abuse:
An empirical study. Psychological Science, 11, 333-337.
Brigham, J. C. & Ready, D. J. (1985).
Own-race bias in lineup construction. Law and Human Behavior, 9, 415-424.
Brown, N.R., Westbury, C. & Buchanan,
L. (2002). Sounds of the neighborhood: False memories and the structure of the
phonological lexicon. Journal of Memory & Language, 46, 622-651.
Bruce, D., Dolan, A. &
Phillips-Grant, K. (2000). On the transition from childhood amnesia to the
recall of personal memories. Psychological Science, 11, 360-364.
Bruck, M, Ceci, S.J. & Francoeur, E. (1999). The accuracy of mothers' memories ofconversations with their preschool children. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 5, 89-106.
Bruck, M., Ceci, S.J. &
Francoeur, E.(2000). Children's use of
anatomically detailed dolls to report genital touching in a medical
examination: Developmental and gender comparisons. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Applied, 6, 74-83
Budson,
A.E., Daffner, K.R., Desikan,
R. & Schacter, D.L. (2000). When false
recognition is unopposed by true recognition: Gist-based memory distortion in
Alzheimer's disease, Neuropsychology, 14,
277-287.
Busey, T.A. & Tunnicliff, J.L.(1999).Accounts of blending,
distinctiveness, and typicality in the false recognition of faces. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 25,
1210-1235.
Busey,T.A., Tunnicliff,
J., Loftus, G.R. & Loftus, E.F.(2000). Accounts of the confidence-accuracy
relation in recognition memory. Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review, 7, 26-48
Cabeza,
R. & Kato, T. (2000). Features are also important: Contributions of featural and configural
processing to face recogntion. Psychological
Science, 11, 429-433.
Ceci,
S.J., Ross, D.F., & Toglia, M.P. (1987).
Suggestibility in children's memory: Psycholegal
implications. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 116, 38-49.
Chalfonte,
B.L. & Johnson, M.K. (1996). Feature memory and binding in young and older
adults. Memory and Cognition, 24, 403-416.
Christiaansen,
R. E., & Ochalek, K. (1983). Editing misleading
information from memory: Evidence for the coexistence of original and postevent information. Memory & Cognition, 11,
467-475.
Clancy, SA., Schacter, D.L., McNally,
R.J. & Pitman, R.K. (2000). False recognition in women reporting recovered
memories of sexual abuse. Psychological-Science,11, 26-31.
Clark, S. & Tunnicliff,
J.L. (2001). Selecting lineup foils in eyewitness identification experiments:
Experimental control and real world simulation. Law and Human Behavior, 25, 199-216.
Conway, M. A. & Pleydell-Pearce,
C. W. (2000). The construction of autobiographical memories in the self-memory
system. Psychological Review, 107, 261-288.
Conway, M. A., Collins, A. F., Gathercole, S. E., & Anderson, S. J (1996).
Recollections of true and false autobiographical memories. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 125, 69-95.
Crick, F. & Koch, C. (1998). Consciousness
and Neuroscience. Cerebral Cortex, 8, 97-107.
Curran, T. & Hintzman,
D.L. (1995). Violations of the independence assumption in process dissociation.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 21,
531-547.
Cutler, B. L. & Penrod,
S. D. (1988). Improving the reliability of eyewitness identification: Lineup
construction and presentation. Journal of Applied Psychology, 73,
281-290.
Deese, J. (1959). On the
prediction of occurrence of particular verbal intrusions in immediate recall. Journal
of Experimental Psychology, 58, 17-22.
Dodson, C.S &
Johnson, M.K. (1996). Some problems with the process-dissociation approach to
memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 125, 181-194.
Dodson,
C.S. & Schacter, D.L. (2001). "If I had said
it I would have remembered it": Reducing false memories with a
distinctiveness heuristic. Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, 8, 155-161.
Dodson, C.S. & Schacter,
D.L. (2002). When false recognition meets metacognition:
The distinctiveness heuristic. Journal of Memory & Language, 46,
782-803.
Dooling,
D.J. & Christiaansen, R.E. (1977). Episodic and
semantic aspects of memory for prose. Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Learning and Memory, 3, 428-436.
Drivdahl,
S.B. & Zaragoza, M.S. (2001). The role of
perceptual elaboration and individual differences in the creation of false
memories for suggested events. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 15,
265-281.
Dunning, D. & Perretta, S. (2002). Automaticity and eyewitness accuracy: A 10- to 12-second
rule for distinguishing accurate from inaccurate positive identifications.
Journal of Applied Psychology, 87, 951-962.
Dunning, D. & Stern, L. B. (1994).
Distinguishing accurate from inaccurate eyewitness identifications via
inquiries about decision processes. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 67, 818-835.
Ebbesen,
E.B. & Flowe, S. (in press). Simultaneous versus
sequential lineups: What do we really know? Law and Human Behavior.
Gagne, C. L., & Shoben,
E. J. (2002). Priming relations in ambiguous noun-noun combinations. Memory
and Cognition, 30, 637-646.
Gallo, D. A., Roberts, M.J., & Seamon,
J.G. (1997). Remembering words not presented in lists: Can we avoid creating
false memories? Psychonomic Bulletin and
Review, 4, 271-276.
Gallo, D.A. & Roediger, H.L. (2002).
Variability among word lists in eliciting memory illusions: Evidence for
associative activation and monitoring. Journal of Memory & Language, 47,
469-497.
Gallo, D.A., McDermott, K.B., Percer, J.M. & Roediger, H.L.
(2001). Modality effects in false recall and false recognition. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27, 339-353.
Gallo,
D.A., Roediger, H.L. & McDermott, K.B. (2001).
Associative false recognition occurs without strategic criterion shifts.Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 8,
579-586.
Gardiner, J.M. (2000). On the objectivity
of subjective experiences of autonoetic and noetic consciousness. In Tulving,
Endel (Ed). Memory, consciousness, and the brain:
The
Gardiner, J.M., &
Gardiner, J.M., &
Garrioch, L. & Brimacombe, C.A.E.
(2001). Lineup administrators' expectations: Their
impact on eyewitness confidence. Law and Human Behavior, 25, 299-314.
Garry, M., Frame, S. & Loftus, E.F. (1999).
Lie down and let me tell you about your childhood.
Garry,
M., Manning, C.G., Loftus, E.F. & Sherman, S.J. (1996).
Imagination inflation: Imagining a childhood event inflates confidence that it
occurred. Psychonomic Bulletin &
Review, 3, 208-214.
Garry, M., Sharman,
S. J., Wade, K. A., Hunt, M. J. & Smith, P. J. (2001). Imagination
inflation is a fact, not an artifact. Memory & Cognition, 29,
719-729.
Garven, S., Wood, J.M. & Malpass,
R.S. (2000). Allegations of wrongdoing: The effects of reinforcement on
children's mundane and fantastic claims. Journal of Applied Psychology, 85,
38-49.
Garven, S., Wood, J.M., Malpass, R.S. & Shaw, J.S. (1998). More than
suggestion: The effect of interviewing techniques from the McMartin
Preschool trial. Journal of Applied Psychology, 83, 347-359.
Ghetti, S., Qin, J. &
Goodman, G.S. (2002). False memories in children and adults: Age,
distinctiveness, and subjective experience. Developmental Psychology, 38,
705-718.
Glucksberg,
S., & Estes, Z. (2000). Feature accessibility in conceptual combination:
Effects of context-induced relevance. Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, 7, 510-515.
Goff, L.M. & Roediger,
H.L. (1998). Imagination inflation for action events: Repeated imaginings lead
to illusory recollections. Memory & Cognition, 26, 20-33.
Golding, J.M., Sanchez,
Gonsalves,
B. & Paller, K.A.(2000).
Neural events that underlie remembering something that never happened. Nature
Neuroscience, 3, 1316-1321.
Goodman, G.S., Batterman-Faunce, J.M., Schaaf, J.M., & Kenney, R. (2002). Nearly 4 years after
an event: Children's eyewitness memory and adults' perceptions of children's
accuracy. Child Abuse & Neglect, 26, 849-884.
Goodman, G.S., Tobey, A.E, Batterman-Faunce,
J.M., Orcutt, H., Thomas, S., Shapiro, C. & Sachsenmaier, T. (1998). Face to face confrontation:
Effects of closed circuit technology on children's eyewitness testimony and
jurors' decisions. Law and Human Behavior, 22, 165-203.
Goodwin, K.A.,
Graesser, A.C., Woll, S.B., Kowalski,
D.J., & Smith, D.A. (1980). Memory for typical
and atypical actions in scripted activities. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 6, 503-515.
Graf, P., & Schacter,
D. L. (1985). Implicit and explicit memory for new associations in normal and
amnesic subjects. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and
Cognition, 11, 501-518.
Green, J. P., Lynn, S.J. & Malinoski,
P. (1998). Hypnotic pseudomemories, prehypnotic warnings, and malleability of suggested
memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 12, 431-444.
Greenberg, M.S., Westcott, D.R. &
Bailey, S.E.(1998). When believing is seeing: The effect of scripts on
eyewitness memory. Law & Human Behavior, 22, 685-694.
Greene, E., Flynn, M.S., & Loftus, E.F. (1982). Inducing resistance
to misleading information. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 21,
207-219.
Greenhoot, A.F., Ornstein,
P.A., Gordon, B.N. & Baker-Ward, L. (1999). Acting out the details of a
pediatric checkup: The impact of interview condition and behavioral style on
children's memory reports. Child Development, 70, 363-380.
Hancock, T.W., Hicks, J.L. & Marsh,
R.L.(2003). Measuring the activation level of critical lures in the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm. American Journal of
Psychology, 116, 1-14.
Hannigan,
S.L. & Reinitz, M.T. (2000). Influences of
temporal factors on memory conjuntion errors. Applied
Cognitive Psychology, 14, 309-321.
Hannigan,
S.L. & Reintiz, M.T. (2001). A demonstration and
comparison of two types of inference-based memory errors. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 27, 931-940.
Hannigan,
S.L., & Reinitz, M.T. (2003). Migration of
objects and inferences across episodes. Memory & Cognition, 31,
434-444.
Heaps, C. & Nash, M. (1999).
Individual differences in imagination inflation. Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review, 6, 313-318.
Heaps, C.M. & Nash, M. (2001).
Comparing recollective experience in true and false
autobiographical memories. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning,
Memory, and Cognition, 27, 920-930.
Henkel,
Henkel,
Hicks, J.L. &
Marsh, R. L. (2001). False recognition occurs more frequently
during source identification than during old new recognition. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27, 375-383.
Hicks, J.L. & Marsh, R.L.(1999).Attempts to reduce the
incidence of false recall with source monitoring. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 25, 1195-1209.
Hicks, J.L., Marsh, R.L.& Ritschel, L. (2002). The role of recollection and partial
information in source monitoring. Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 28, 503-508.
Higham, P.A. (1998). Believing details known to have
been suggested. British Journal of Psychology, 89, 265-283.
Hintzman, D. L.,
Curran, T., & Oppy, B. (1992). Effects of similarity
and repetition on memory: Registration without learning? Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 18, 667-680.
Hirshman, E., Passannante, A. & Arndt, J. (2001). Midazolam
amnesia and conceptual processing in implicit memory. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: General, 130, 453-465.
Hoffman, H.G., Granhag,
P.A., See, S.T.K. & Loftus, E.F. (2001). Social influences on
reality-monitoring decisions. Memory & Cognition, 29, 394-404.
Holden, K.J. & French, C.C. (2002). Alien abduction
experiences: Some clues from neuropsychology and
neuropsychiatry. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 7, 163-178.
Holliday, R.E. & Hayes, B.K. (2000). Dissociating automatic
and intentional processes in children's eyewitness memory. Journal of Experimental
Child Psychology, 75, 1-42.
Holmes, DS. (1990). Evidence for repression: An
examination of 60 years of research. In JL Singer (Ed). Repression and
Dissociation: Implication for Personality Theory, Psychopathology, and Health.
(pp. 85-102).
Holmes, J.B., Waters, H.S. & Rajaram,
S. (1998). The phenomenology of false memories: Episodic content and
confidence. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and
Cognition, 24, 1026-1040.
Hyman, I.E. &
Hyman,
I.E., Husband, T.F., &
Intons-Peterson,
M. J. Rocchi, P., West, T, McLellan,
K. & Hackney, A. (1999). Age, testing at preferred or nonpreferred times (testing optimality), and false
memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, &
Cognition, 25, 23-40.
Jacoby,
L. L, & Dallas, M. (1981). ON the relationship between autobiographical memory and
perceptual learning. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 110,
306-340.
Jacoby, L.L. (1991). A
process dissociation framework: Separating automatic from intentional uses of
memory. Journal of Memory and Language, 30, 497-514.
Jacoby, L.L. (1997). Invariance in automatic influences
of memory: Toward a user's guide for the process-dissociation procedure. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 24, 3-26.
Jacoby, L.L., Allan, L.G., Collins, J.C., & Larwill, L.K. (1988). Memory influences subjective
experience: Noise judgments. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning,
Memory, and Cognition, 14, 240-247.
Jacoby, L.L., Yonelinas, A.P. & Jennings, J. (1997). The relation
between conscious and unconscious (automatic) influences. A declaration of independence.
In J. Cohen & J.W. Schooler (Eds.), Scientific
Approaches to Consciousness (pp.13-47).
Johnson,
M. K. & Chalfonte, B. L. (1994).
Binding complex memories: The role of reactivation and the hippocampus. In D.L.
Schacter & E. Tulving
(Eds.), Memory Systems (pp. 311-350).
Johnson, M.K., &
Reeder, J.A. (1997). Consciousness as meta-processing. In J.D. Cohen & J.W. Schooler (Eds.), Scientific approaches to consciousness
(pp. 261-293).
Johnson, M.K., Hashtroudi,
S. & Lindsay, D.S. (1993). Source monitoring. Psychological
Bulletin, 114, 3-28.
Johnson, M.K., Raye, C.L., Wang, A.Y.
& Taylor, T.T. (1979). Fact and fantasy: The roles of accuracy and
variability in confusing imaginations with perceptual experiences. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 5, 229-240.
Jones, T.C. & Jacoby, L.L. (2001).
Feature and conjunction errors in recognition memory: Evidence for dual process
theory. Journal of Memory and Language, 45, 82-102.
Jones, T.C., & Atchley, P. (2002).
Conjunction error rates on a continuous recognition memory test: Little
evidence for recollection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning,
Memory and Cognition, 28, 374-379.
Jones, T.C., Jacoby,
L.L., & Gellis,
Jurica, P.J.
& Shimamura, A.P. (1999). Monitoring item and
source information: Evidence for a negative generation effect in source memory.
Memory & Cognition, 27, 648-656.
Kassin,
S. M. (1985). Eyewitness identification: Retrospective self-awareness and the
accuracy-confidence correlation. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 49, 878-893.
Kassin,
S.M. & Fong, C.T. (1999). "I'm innocent!": Effects of training on
judgments of truth and deception in the interrogation room.Law
and Human Behavior, 23, 499-516.
Kassin, S.M. & Sukel, J.
(1997). Coerced confesions and the jury: An
experimental test of the "harmless error" rule. Law and Human Behavior,
21, 27-46.
Kassin,
S.M., Goldstein, C.C. & Savitsky, K. (2003).
Behavioral confirmation in the interrogation room: On the dangers of presuming
guilt. Law & Human Behavior, 27, 187-203.
Kelley, C.M. & Sahakyan,
L. (2003). Memory, monitoring, and control in the attainment of memory
accuracy, Journal of Memory and Language, 48, 704-721.
Kellogg, R.T. (2001). Presentation
modality and mode of recall in verbal false memory. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27, 913-919.
Kimball, D.R. & Bjork,
R.A. (2002).Influences of intentional and unintentional forgetting on false
memories. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 131,
116-130.
Klinger, M.R. (2001). The roles of attention
and awareness in the false recognition effect. American Journal of
Psychology, 114, 93-114.
Kluft, R.P. (1997). The argument for the reality of
delayed recall of trauma. In P.S. Appelbaum,
Knott, R. & Marslen-Wilson, W. (2001). Does the medial
temporal lobe bind phonological memories? Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience,
13, 593-609.
Koriat, A., Goldsmith, M.,
& Pansky, A. (2000) Toward a psychology of memory
accuracy. Annual Review of Psychology, 51, 481-537.
Koutstaal,
W., Schacter, D.L. & Brenner, C. (2001). Dual
task demands and gist based false recognition of pictures in younger and older
adults. Journal of Memory and Language, 44, 399-426.
Koutstaal, W., Schacter,
D.L., Galluccio, L., & Stofer,
K.A.(1999). Reducing gist-based false recognition in older adults: Encoding and
retrieval manipulations. Psychology & Aging, 14, 220-237.
Kroll, N.E.A., Knight, R.T., Metcalfe,
J., Wolf, E.S., &Tulving, E. (1996). Cohesion
failures as a source of memory illusions. Journal
of Memory and Language, 35, 176-196.
Kroll, N.E.A., Yonelinas, A.P., Dobbins,
I.G., &
Lampinen, J.M. & Schwartz, R.M. (2000).
The impersistence of false memory persistence. Memory,
8, 393-400.
Lampinen,
J.M. & Smith, V.L. (1995). The incredible (and sometimes incredulous) child
witness: Child eyewitnesses' sensitivity to source credibility cues. Journal
of Applied Psychology, 80, 621-627.
Lampinen,
J.M., Copeland, S. & Neuschatz, J.S. (2001).
Recollections of things schematic: Room schemas revisisted.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 27,
1211-1222.
Lampinen,
J.M., Faries, J.M., Neuschatz,
J.S., & Toglia, M.P. (2000). Recollections of things
schematic: The influence of scripts on recollective
experience. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 543-554.
Lampinen,
J.M., Neuschatz, J.S. & Payne, D.G. (1998).
Memory illusions and consciousness: Exploring the phenomenology of true and
false memories. Current Psychology, 16, 181-224.
Lampinen,
J.M., Neuschatz, J.S. and Payne, D.G. (1999). Source
attributions and false memories: A test of the demand characteristics account. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 6,
130-135.
Landau, J.D. & Marsh, R.L. (1997). Monitoring source in an
unconscious plagiarism paradigm. Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, 4, 265-270.
Leboe,
J.P. & Whittlesea, B.W.A.(2002). The inferential
basis of familiarity and recall: Evidence for a common underlying process. Journal
of Memory & Language, 46, 804-829.
Leichtman,
M. D. and Ceci, S. J. (1995). The effects of
stereotypes and suggestions on preschoolers' reports. Developmental
Psychology, 31, 568-578.
Lenton,
A.P. Blair, I.V., & Hastie, R.(2001). Illusions
of gender: Stereotypes evoke false memories. Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology, 37, 3-14.
Levin, D.T. (2000). Race as a Visual
Feature: Using Visual Search and Perceptual Discrimination Tasks to Understand
Face Categories and the Cross-Race Recognition Deficit. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: General,
Libby, L.K. & Neisser,
U. (2001). Structure and strategy in the associative false memory paradigm. Memory,
9, 145-163.
Lindsay, D.S. (1990).
Misleading suggestions can impair eyewitnesses' ability to recall event details.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 16,
1077-1083.
Lindsay, R. C. L. & Wells, G. L.
(1985). Improving eyewitness identifications from lineups: Simultaneous versus
sequential lineup presentation. Journal of Applied Psychology, 70,
556-564.
Lindsay, R.C. L. & Bellinger, K.
(1999).Alternatives to the sequential lineup: The importance of controlling the
pictures. Journal of Applied Psychology, 84, 315-321.
Loftus, E.F. & Mazzoni,
G. A. L. (1998). Using imagination and personalized suggestion to change people.
Behavior Therapy, 29, 691-706.
Loftus, E.F. & Pickrell, J.E. (1995). The formation of false memories. Psychiatric
Annals, 25, 720-725.
Loftus, E.F. (1979).
The malleability of human memory: Information introduced after we view an
incident can transform memory. American Scientist, 67, 312-320.
Long, D.L. & Prat, C.S. (2002).
Memory for Star Trek : The role of prior knowledge in recognition
revisited. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, &
Cognition, 28, 1073-1082.
Mandler, G. (1980).
Recognizing: The judgment of previous occurrence. Psychological Review, 87, 252-271.
Marsh, R.L. & Hicks, J.L. (2001).
Output monitoring tests reveal false memories of memories that never existed. Memory,
9, 39-51.
Marsh, R.L., Hicks, J.L., &
Mather, M., Henkel, L.A. & Johnson,
M.K. (1997). Evaluating characteristics of false
memories: Remember/know judgments and memory characteristics questionnaire
compared. Memory & Cognition, 25, 838-848.
Mather, M., Shafir, E. &
Johnson, M.K. (2000). Misremembrance of options past:
Source monitoring and choice. Psychological Science,11, 132-138.
Mazzoni, G. A. L., Lombardo, P., Malvagia, S., & Loftus, E. F. (1999). Dream
interpretation and false beliefs. Professional Psychology: Research &
Practice, 30, 45-50.
Mazzoni, G.A. L., Loftus, E.F., Seitz, A. &
Lynn, S.J. (1999). Changing beliefs and memories through dream interpretation. Applied
Cognitive Psychology, 13, 125-144.
Mazzoni, G.A.L., Loftus, E.F. & Kirsch,
McCloskey,
M. & Zaragoza, M. (1985).
Misleading postevent information and memory for
events: Arguments and evidence against memory impairment hypotheses. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: General, 114, 1-16.
McDermott, K. B., Jones, T. C., Peterson,
S. E., Lageman, S. K., & Roediger,
H. L. (2001). Retrieval success is accompanied by enhanced activation in
anterior prefrontal cortex during
recognition memory: An event-related fMRI study. Journal
of Cognitive Neuroscience, 12, 965-976.
McDermott, K.B. & Roediger, H.L. (1998).
Attempting to avoid illusory memories: Robust false recognition of associates
persists under conditions of explicit warning and immediate testing. Journal
of Memory and Language, 39, 508-520.
McDermott, K.B. & Watson, J.M.
(2001). The rise and fall of false recall: The impact of presentation duration.
Journal of Memory and Language, 45, 160-176.
McDermott, K.B., & Roediger, H.L.
III. (1998) Attempting to avoid illusory memories: Robust false recognition of
associates persists under conditions of explicit warnings and immediate
testing. Journal of memory and Language, 39, 508-520.
McElree, B., Dolan,
P.O., & Jacoby, L.L. (1999). Isolating familiarity and recollective
processes: A time course analysis. Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory and Cognition, 25, 563-582.
McEvoy, C.L., Nelson, D.L. & Komatsu, T.
(1999).What is the connection between true and false memories? The differential
roles of interitem associations in recall and
recognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, &
Cognition, 25, 1177-1194.
McKone,
E. & Murphy, B. (2000). Implicit false memory: Effects of modality and
multiple study presentations on long-lived semantic priming. Journal of
Memory and Language, 43, 89-109.
McKoon,
G., Ratliff, R. (1995). Conceptual combinations and relational contexts in free
association and in priming in lexical decision and naming. Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, 7, 510-515.
McQuiston, D.E. & Malpass,
R.S. (2002). Validity of the mockwitness paradigm:
Testing the assumptions. Law & Human Behavior, 26, 439-453.
Memon, A. & Gabbert, F. (2003).
Improving the identification accuracy of senior witnesses: Do prelineup questions and sequential testing help? Journal
of Applied Psychology, 88, 341-347.
Miller, A.R., Baratta,
C., Wynveen, C. & Rosenfeld, J.P.(2001). P300
latency, but not amplitude or topography, distinguishes between true and false
recognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and
Cognition, 27, 354-361.
Miller, M.B. & Wolford, G.L. (1999). The role of criterion
shift in false memories. Psychological Review, 106,
398-405.
Mitchell, K.J. & Zaragoza,
M.S.(2001). Contextual overlap and eyewitness suggestibility. Memory and Cognition,
29, 616-626,
Mitchell, K.J., Johnson, M.K., Raye, C.L., Mather, M. & D'Esposito, M. (2000). Aging and reflective processes of
working memory: Binding and test load deficits. Psychology and Aging, 15,
527-541.
Multhaup, K.S., de Leonardis,
D.M. & Johnson, M.K. (1999). Source memory and eyewitness suggestibility in
older adults. Journal of General Psychology, 126, 74-84.
Navon,
D. (1992). Selection of lineup foils by similarity to the suspect is likely to
misfire. Law and Human Behavior, 16, 575-593.
Nelson, D.L. & McEvoy,
C.L. (2002). How can the same type of prior knowledge both help and hinder
recall? Journal of Memory & Language, 46, 652-663.
Neuschatz, J.S., Lampinen, J.M.,
Neuschatz, J.S., Payne, D.G., Lampinen,
J.M. & Toglia, M.P. (2001).
Assessing the effectiveness of warnings and the phenomenological
characteristics of false memories. Memory, 9, 39-51.
O'Reilly, R.C. & Rudy, J.W. (2001).
Conjunctive representations in learning and memory: Principles of cortical and hippocampal function. Psychological Review, 108,
311-345.
Parkin, A.J., & Walter,
B. (1992). Recollective experience, normal aging, and
frontal dysfunction. Psychology and Aging, 7, 290-298.
Payne, B. K. (2001). Prejudice and perception:
The role of automatic and controlled processes in misperceiving a weapon. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 181-192.
Payne, D. G., Elie, C. J., Blackwell, J. M., and Neuschatz,
J. S. (1996). Memory illusions: Recalling, recognizing, and recollecting events
that never occurred. Journal of Memory and Language, 35, 261-285.
Payne, D.G., Klin,
C.M., Lampinen, J.M., Neuschatz,
J.S. & Lindsay, D.S. (1999). Memory applied. In Durso,
F. T., Nickerson, R., Schvaneveldt, R. W., Dumais, S. T., Lindsay, D.S., & Chi, M.T.H. (Eds.).
(pp. 83-113). The Handbook of Applied Cognition. Wiley: NY.
Payne, D.G., Neuschatz,
J.S, Lampinen, J.M. &
Pezdek, K. & Eddy, R.M. (2001).
Imagination inflation: A statistical artifact of regression toward the mean. Memory
and Cognition, 29, 707-718.
Pezdek, K. & Hodge, D. (1999). Planting false
childhood memories in children: The role of event plausibility. Child
Development, 70, 887-895.
Pezdek, K. & Roe, C. (1997). The suggestibility of
children's memory for being touched: Planting, erasing and changing memories. Law
and Human Behavior, 21, 95-106.
Pezdek, K., Finger, K. & Hodge, D. (1997).
Planting false childhood memories: The role of event plausibility. Psychological
Science, 8, 437-441.
Pezdek,
Whetstone, Reynolds, Askari, & Dougherty, (1989).
Memory for real world scenes: The role of consistency with schema expectation.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, 15,
587-595.
Phillips, M.R., McAuliff, B.D., Kovera, M.B. & Cutler, B.L. (1999). Double-blind photoarray administration as a safeguard against
investigator bias. Journal of Applied Psychology, 84, 940-951.
Pickel, K.L. (1998). Unusualness and threat as
possible causes of "weapon focus." Memory, 6, 277-295.
Porter, S., Birt, A.R., Yuille, J.C. & Lehman,
D.R. (2000). Negotiating false memories: Interviewer
and rememberer characteristics relate to memory
distortion. Psychological Science, 11, 507-510.
Porter, S., Yuille, J.C. & Lehman,
D.R. (1999).The nature of real, implanted, and fabricated memories for
emotional childhood events: Implications for the recovered memory debate. Law
& Human Behavior, 23, 517-537.
Powell, M.B., Roberts, K.P., Ceci, S. J.
& Hembrooke, H. (1999).The effects of repeated
experience on children's suggestibility. Developmental Psychology, 35,
1462-1477.
Pozzulo,
J.D. & Warren, K.L.(2003). Descriptions and identifications of strangers by
youth and adult eyewitnesses. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88,
315-323.
Quas, J.A., Goodman, G.S., Bidrose,
S., Pipe, M.E., Craw, S. & Ablin, D.S.(1999). Emotion and memory: Children's long-term
remembering, forgetting, and suggestibility. Journal of Experimental Child
Psychology, 72, 235-270.
Rajaram, S. (1993).
Remembering and knowing: Two means of access to the personal past. Memory
& Cognition, 21, 89-102.
Ratcliff, R., & McKoon,
G. (1996). Bias effects in implicit memory tasks. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: General, 125, 403-421.
Raye,
C.L., Johnson, M.K., Mitchell, K.J., Nolde, S.F.
& D'Esposito, M. (2000). fMRI
investigations of left and right PFC contributions to episodic remembering.
Psychobiology, 28, 197-206.
Read, J.D. & Lindsay, D.S. (2000). "Amnesia" for
summer camps and high school graduation: Memory work increases reports of prior
periods of remembering less. Journal of Traumatic Stress,13, 129-147.
Redlich,
A.D. & Goodman, G.S.(2003). Taking responsibility for an act not committed:
The influence of age and suggestibility. Law & Human Behavior, 27,
141-156.
Reese, E. & Brown, N. (2000).
Reminiscing and recounting in the preschool years. Applied Cognitive
Psychology, 14, 1-17.
Reinitz, M. T., & Hannigan, S. L. (2001). Effects of simultaneous stimulus
presentation and attention switching on memory conjunction errors. Journal
of Memory and Language, 44, 206-219.
Reinitz, M. T., Lammers, W. J., & Cochran, B. P. (1992). Memory-conjunction
errors: Miscombination of stored stimulus features
can produce illusions of memory. Memory and Cognition, 20, 1-11.
Reinitz, M. T., Morrissey, J., & Demb, J. (1994). Role of attention in face encoding. Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 20, 161- 168.
Rhodes, M.G. & Anastasi,
J.S. (2000). The effects of a levels-of-processing manipulation on false
recall. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 7,
158-162.
Rhodes, M.G. & Kelley,
C.M.(2003). The ring of familiarity: False familiarity due to rhyming
primes in item and associative recognition. Journal of Memory &
Language, 48, 581-595.
Robinson, M.D., Johnson, J.T. &
Robertson, D.A. (2000). Process versus content in eyewitness metamemory monitoring. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Applied, 6, 207-221.
Roebers,
C.M. & McConkey, K.M. (2003). Mental
reinstatement of the misinformation context and the misinformation effect in
children and adults. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 17, 477-493.
Roediger,
H. L., & McDermott, K. B. (1995). Creating false memories: Remembering
words not presented in lists. Journal of Memory and Language, 35, 300-318.
Roediger,
H.L., Balota, D.A. & Watson, J.M. (2001).
Spreading activation and the arousal of false memories. In H.L. Roediger, J.S. Nairne,
Roediger,
H.L., Meade, M.L. & Bergman, E.T.(2001). Social
contagion of memory. Psychonomic Bulletin
and Review, 8, 365-371.
Roediger, H.L.,
Watson, J.M., McDermott, K.B. & Gallo, D.A. (2001). Factors that
determine false recall: A multiple regression analysis. Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review, 8, 385-407.
Roediger,
H.L., Weldon, M.S., & Challis, B.H. (1989). Explaining dissociations
between implicit and explicit measures of retention: A processing
account. Chapter in H.L. Roediger & F.I.M. Craik (Eds.), Varieties of memory and consciousness: Essays
in honour of Endel Tulving. (pp. 3-39).
Rotello, C. M., Macmillan, N. A., & Van-Tassel, G. (2000).
Recall-to-reject in recognition: Evidence from ROC curves. Journal of Memory
and Language, 43, 67-88.
Rotello,
C.M. & Heit, E. (1999). Two-process models of
recognition memory: Evidence for recall-to-reject? Journal of Memory and
Language, 40, 432-453.
Rotello,
C.M. & Heit, E.(2000). Associative recognition: A
case of recall-to-reject processing. Memory and Cognition, 28, 907-922.
Schacter,
D.L. (1990). Perceptual representation systems and implicit memory: Toward a
resolution of the multiple memory systems debate. Annals of the
Schacter, D.L. (1995). Implicit
memory: A new frontier for cognitive neuroscience. In M.S. Gazzaniga
(Ed). The Cognitive Neurosciences. (pp. 815-824).
Schacter,
D.L.,
Schacter, D.L.,
Schooler, J. W., Gerhard, D. & Loftus, E. F. (1986).
Qualities of the unreal. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning,
Memory and Cognition, 12, 171-181.
Schreiber, N., Wentura,
D. & Bilsky, W.(2001). "What else could he
have done?" Creating false answers in child witnesses by inviting
speculation. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86, 525-532.
Schreiber,
Schwartz, B.L., Fisher, R.P. & Hebert, K.S.
(1998). The relation of output order and commission errors in free recall
and eyewitness accounts. Memory, 6, 257-275.
Seamon, J.G., Lee, I.A., Toner, S.K., Wheeler, R.H., Goodkind, M.S. & Birch, A.D. (2002). Thinking of
critical words during study is unnecessary for false memory in the Deese, Roediger, and McDermott
procedure. Psychological Science, 13, 526-531.
Seamon, J.G., Luo, C.R.,
Schlegel, S.E., Greene, S.E. & Goldberg, A.B. (2000). False memories for
categorized pictures and words: The category associates procedure for studying
memory errors in children and adults. Journal of Memory and Language, 42,
120-146.
Seamon,
JG., Luo, C.R., Schwartz, M.A., Jones, K.J., Lee,
D.M., & Jones, S.J., (2002). Repetition can have similar or different
effects on accurate and false recognition. Journal of Memory & Language,
46, 323-340.
Searcy, J.H.,
Sheen, M., Kemp, S.
& Rubin, D. (2001). Twins dispute memory ownership: A new
false memory phenomenon. Memory & Cognition, 29, 779-788.
Smith, E. D., Osherson,
D. N., Rips, L. J., & Keane, M. (1988). Combining prototypes: A
modification model. Cognitive Science, 12, 485-527
Smith, S.M., Lindsay, R.C.L. & Pryke, S. (2000). Postdictors of
eyewitness errors: Can false identifications be diagnosed? Journal of
Applied Psychology, 85, 542-550.
Smith, S.M., Lindsay, R.C.L., Pryke, S. & Dysart, J.E. (2001). Postdictors
of eyewitness errors: Can false identifications be diagnosed in the cross race
situation? Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 7, 153-169.
Smith, S.M., Tindell,
D.R., Pierce, B.H., Gilliland, T.R. & Gerkens,
D.R. (2001). The use of source memory to identify one's own episodic confusion
errors. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition,
27, 362-374.
Smith, S.M., Ward, T.B., Tindell, D.R. & Sifonis, C.M.
(2000). Category structure and created memories. Memory and Cognition, 28,
386-395.
Sommers, M.S. & Lewis, B.P. (1999). Who
really lives next door: Creating false memories with phonological neighbors. Journal
of Memory & Language, 40, 83-108.
Sommers,
S.R. & Kassin, S.M. (2001). On the many impacts
of inadmissible testimony: Selective compliance, need for cognition, and the overcorrection bias. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, 27, 1368-1377.
Spaniol,
J. & Bayen, U.J. (2002). When is schematic
knowledge used in source monitoring? Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 28, 631-651.
Spanos, N.P., Burgess,
Srinivas,
K., Culp, D. & Rajaram, S. (2000). On
associations between computers and restaurants: Rapid learning of new
associations on a conceptual implicit memory test. Memory & Cognition,
28, 900-906.
Sussman,
A.L. (2001). Reality monitoring of performed and imagined interactive events:
Developmental and contextual effects. Journal of Experimental Child
Psychology, 79, 115-138.
Templeton,
Wallace, W.P., Malone,
C.P. & Spoo, A.D. (2000).
Implicit word activation during prerecognition
processing: False recognition and remember/know judgments. Psychonomic
Bulletin and Review, 7, 149-157
Thapar,
A. & McDermott, K.B. (2001). False recall and false recognition induced by
presentation of associated words: Effects of retention interval and level of
processing. Memory & Cognition, 29, 424-432.
Thierry, K.L., Spence, M.J. & Memon, A.(2001). Before misinformation is encountered:
Source monitoring decreases child witness suggestibility. Journal of
Cognition and Development, 2, 1-26.
Thompson, W.C., Clarke-Stewart, K.A. & Lepore,
S.J. (1997). What did the janitor do? Suggestive interviewing and the accuracy
of childrenâs accounts. Law and Human Behavior, 21,
405-426.
Toglia, M.P., Neuschatz,
J.S. & Goodwin, K.A. (1999). Recall accuracy and illusory memory: When more
is less. Memory, 7, 233-256.
Tulving,
E. (1985). Memory and consciousness. Canadian Psychologist, 26, 1-12.
Tunnicliff, J.L. & Clark, S.E. (2000).
Selecting foils for identification lineups: Matching suspects to descriptions? Law
and Human Behavior, 24, 231-258.
Underwood, B. J, & Zimmerman, J. (1973). The syllable as a
source of error in multisyllable word recognition. Journal
of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 12, 701-706.
Underwood, B. J., Kapelak,
S. M., & Malimi, R. A. (1976). Integration of
discrete verbal units in recognition memory. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 2, 293-300.
Underwood, J. & Pezdek, K. (1998).
Memory suggestibility as an example of the sleeper effect. Psychonomic
Bulletin & Review, 5, 449-453.
Venneri,-Annalena;
Shanks,-Michael-F-(2001). Preservation of golf skills in a case of severe left
lobar frontotemporal degeneration. Neurology, 57,
521-524.
Wade, K.A., Garry, M., Read, J.D. & Lindsay, D.S. (2002). A
picture is worth a thousand lies: Using false photographs to create false
childhood memories. Psychonomic Bulletin
and Review, 9, 597-603.
Wallace, W.P., Malone, C.P., Swiergosz, M.J. & Amberg,
M.D. (2000). On the generality of false recognition reversal. Journal
of Memory and Language, 43, 561-575.
Waterman, A.H., Blades, M. & Spencer,
C. (2000). Do children try to answer nonsensical questions? British Journal
of Developmental Psychology, 18, 211-225.
Watson, J.M., Balota, D.A., &
Weber, N. &
Brewer, N. (2003). The effect of judgment type and
confidence scale on confidence-accuracy calibration in face recognition. Journal
of Applied Psychology, 88, 490-499.
Wells, G. L. & Bradfield, A. L.
(1999). Distortions in eyewitnesses' recollections: Can the
postidentification feedback effect be moderated? Psychological
Science, 10, 138-144.
Wells, G. L., Olson, E. A., & Charman, S. D. (2003). Distorted retrospective eyewitness
reports as functions of feedback and delay. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Applied, 9, 42-52.
Wells, G.L. & Bradfield, A.L.
(1998). "Good, you identified the suspect": Feedback to eyewitnesses
distorts their reports of the witnessing experience. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 83, 360-376.
Wells, G.L. & Olson, E.A. (2002). Eyewitness identification:
Information gain from incriminating and exonerating behaviors. Journal of
Experimental Psychology: Applied, 8, 155-167.
Wells, G.L. (1993).
What do we know about eyewitness identifications? American Psychologist, 48,
553-571.
Wells, G.L., Small, M., Penrod,
S., Malpass, R.S., Fulero,
S.M. & Brimacombe, C.A.E. (1998). Eyewitness
identification procedures: Recommendations for lineups and photospreads.
Law and Human Behavior, 22, 603-647.
Whittlesea,
B.W.A. (2002). False memory and the discrepancy-attribution hypothesis: The
prototype-familiarity illusion. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General,
131, 96-115.
Wilkenfeld,
M. J. (2001). Similarity and emergence in conceptual combination. Journal of
Memory & Language, 45, 21-38.
Wisniewski, E. J., & Middleton, E. L.
(2001). Of Bucket Bowls and Coffee Cup Bowls: Spatial Alignment in Conceptual
Combination. Journal of Memory and Language, 46, 1-23
Wixted,
J.T. & Stretch, V. (2000). The case against a criterion-shift account of
false memory. Psychological Review, 107, 368-376.
Wright, D.B. & Stroud, J.N. (1998). Memory quality and
misinformation for peripheral and central objects. Legal &
Criminological Psychology, 3, 273-286.
Yonelinas, A. P. (1997).
Recognition memory ROCs for item and associative
information: The contribution of recollection and familiarity. Memory and
Cognition, 25, 747-763.
Yonelinas, A. P. (1999).
The contributions of recollection and familiarity to recognition and
source-memory judgments: A formal dual-process model and an analysis of
receiver operating characteristics. Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 25, 1415-1434.
Yonelinas, A. P., &
Jacoby, L. L. (1994). Dissociations of processes in recognition memory: Effects
of interference and response speed. Canadian Journal of Canadian Psychology,
48, 516-534.
Yonelinas, A. P., Dobbins,
Yonelinas,
A.P. (2002). The nature of recollection and familiarity: A review of 30 years
of research. Journal of Memory and Language, 46, 441-517.
![]()