1st Edition

Memory Editing Mechanisms A Special Issue of Memory

Edited By James Michael Lampinen, Timothy N. Odegard Copyright 2006
    142 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    This special issue of Memory is devoted to an investigation of those mechanisms by which memory is edited for inaccuracies and inconsistencies. In the past 20 years false memories have been investigated from a variety of different angles. Substantial evidence indicates that false memories can be created in a number of different situations including word learning, sentence and story memory, eyewitness memory, memory for faces, and memory for naturalistic scenes. In each of these cases, it has been found that memory is subject to a range of distortions. But there has also been an increasing recognition that this is only half the story. For although memory is subject to distortion, there are also quality control mechanisms that are utilized that allow our memories to be relied on as reasonably accurate under most circumstances. These mechanisms include recollection rejection, distinctiveness, and source memory. The focus of this special issue then, is on the interplay between those mechanisms that distort memory and those mechanisms that protect memory against distortion.

    J.M. Lampinen, T.N. Odegard, Memory Editing Mechanisms. J.M. Lampinen, K.N. Watkins, T. N. Odegard, Phantom ROC: Recollection Rejection in a Hybrid Conjoint Recognition Signal Detection Model. C.J. Brainerd, V.F. Reyna, S. Estrada, Recollection Rejection of False Narrative Statements. H. Dehon, Variations in Processing Resources and Resistance to False Memories in Younger and Older Adults. T.C. Jones, Editing (Out) Generated Study Words in a Recognition Exclusion Task: Effects of Response Signal Delay and Generation Procedures. D.A. Gallo, D.M. Bell, J.S. Beier, D.L. Schachter, Two Types of Recollection-based Monitoring in Younger and Older Adults. J.J. Starns, J.L. Hicks, R.L. Marsh, Repetition Effects in Associative False Recognition: Theme-based Criterion Shifts Are the Exception, Not the Rule. S. Ghetti, P. Castelli, Developmental Differences in False-Event Rejection: Effects of Memorability-based Warnings. T.N. Odegard, J.M. Lampinen, Memory Editing: Knowledge, Criteria, and Alignment.

    Biography

    James Michael Lampinen, Timothy N. Odegard