نتایج جستجو برای: misinformation

تعداد نتایج: 2656  

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. General 1989
E F Loftus H G Hoffman

Misleading information presented after an event can lead people to erroneous reports of that misinformation. Different process histories can be responsible for the same erroneous report in different people. We argue that the relative proportion of times that the different process histories are responsible for erroneous reporting will depend on the conditions of acquisition, retention, and retri...

Journal: :Psychological science 2009
Andrew C Butler Franklin M Zaromb Keith B Lyle Henry L Roediger

Popular history films sometimes contain major historical inaccuracies. Two experiments investigated how watching such films influences people's ability to remember associated texts. Subjects watched film clips and studied texts about various historical topics. Whereas the texts contained only correct information, the film clips contained both correct information (consistent with the text) and m...

Journal: :Memory 2002
Peter Frost Melissa Ingraham Beth Wilson

Although memory for actual events tends to be forgotten over time, memory for misinformation tends to be retrieved at a stable rate over long delays or at a rate greater than that found immediately after encoding. To examine whether source monitoring errors contribute to this phenomenon, two experiments investigated subjects' memory for the source of misinformation at different retention interv...

2017
John Cook Stephan Lewandowsky Ullrich K. H. Ecker

Misinformation can undermine a well-functioning democracy. For example, public misconceptions about climate change can lead to lowered acceptance of the reality of climate change and lowered support for mitigation policies. This study experimentally explored the impact of misinformation about climate change and tested several pre-emptive interventions designed to reduce the influence of misinfo...

Journal: :Journal of experimental child psychology 1998
C J Brainerd V F Reyna

Fuzzy-trace theory's concepts of identity judgment, nonidentity judgment, and similarity judgment provide a unified account of the false-memory phenomena that have been most commonly studied in children: false-recognition effects and misinformation effects. False-recognition effects (elevated false-alarm rates for unpresented distractors that preserve the meanings of presented targets) are due ...

2002
Robyn E. Holliday Valerie F. Reyna Brett K. Hayes

In this article, we review empirical findings that misinformation effects in children are the joint product of automatic or unconscious and intentional or conscious processes. First, we outline the extant literature on multiple systems and process models of memory. Second, we examine how dual memory processes (e.g., recollection and automaticity, verbatim-based identity, and gist-based similari...

2002
Elizabeth F. Loftus Hunter G. Hoffman

Misleading information presented after an event can lead people to erroneous reports of that misinformation. Different process histories can be responsible for the same erroneous report in different people. We argue that the relative proportion of times that the different process histories are responsible for erroneous reporting will depend on the conditions of acquisition, retention, and retri...

Journal: :Memory 2010
Bi Zhu Chuansheng Chen Elizabeth F Loftus Chongde Lin Qinghua He Chunhui Chen He Li Gui Xue Zhonglin Lu Qi Dong

This research investigated the cognitive correlates of false memories that are induced by the misinformation paradigm. A large sample of Chinese college students (N=436) participated in a misinformation procedure and also took a battery of cognitive tests. Results revealed sizable and systematic individual differences in false memory arising from exposure to misinformation. False memories were ...

2010
Philip A. Higham Karlos Luna Jessica Bloomfield

Two experiments are reported that investigate the impact of misinformation on memory accuracy and metacognitive resolution. In Experiment 1, participants viewed a series of photographs depicting a crime scene, were exposed to misinformation that contradicted details in the slides, and later took a recognition memory test. For each answer, participants were required to indicate whether they were...

Journal: :Law and human behavior 2012
Nadja Schreiber Compo Jacqueline R Evans Rolando N Carol Daniella Villalba Lindsay S Ham Tracy Garcia Stefan Rose

According to law enforcement, many witnesses are intoxicated either at the time of the crime, the interview, or both (Evans et al., Public Policy Law 15(3):194-221, 2009). However, no study to date has examined whether intoxicated witnesses' recall is different from sober witnesses' and whether they are more vulnerable to misinformation using an ecologically valid experimental design. Intoxicat...

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