Exam 8: False Memory
Exam 1: Introduction to the Study of Memory114 Questions
Exam 2: Memory and the Brain114 Questions
Exam 3: Working Memory113 Questions
Exam 4: Episodic Memory82 Questions
Exam 5: Semantic Memory84 Questions
Exam 6: Visual Memory84 Questions
Exam 7: Autobiographical Memory84 Questions
Exam 8: False Memory84 Questions
Exam 9: Metamemory83 Questions
Exam 10: Memory Disorders84 Questions
Exam 11: Memory in Childhood84 Questions
Exam 12: Memory in Older Adults83 Questions
Exam 13: Memory Improvement and Learning Efficiency84 Questions
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Geraerts, Raymaekers, and Merckelbach (2008) found that spontaneous sudden memories are more likely to be correlated with documented histories of abuse.
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True
Explain correspondence as it relates to memory.
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A match between retrieved memory and an actual past event.
In the coexistence view of the misinformation effect,
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D
In the misinformation effect, participants witness a simulated crime.Later they receive misinformation about some items, but not others.The general pattern of results is that participants show greater memory accuracy for those items that they received misinformation.
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One of the advantages of hypnosis is that it can lead to a reduction in pain in people suffering from chronic pain.
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In McCloskey and Zaragoza (1985), the misinformation effect did not occur because:
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Research shows that the ______ interview can boost the amount recalled by a willing eyewitness.
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Which of the following statements concerning Susan Clancy's (1995) research on people who remember being abducted by space aliens is false?
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If you false report a memory of an imagined event as really happening, your false memory has arisen because of:
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Anderson and Green (2001) were interested in repression that could be simulated in the laboratory and modeled on retrieval active suppression.They trained participants on simple word pairs.When the participants had mastered a list of forty word pairs (i.e., improved to the point where they could recall all the target words when given the cue word), they were given what Anderson and Green called a "think/no think" procedure.They found that:
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The trace ______ view is also a theory that explains the misinformation effect.
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McCloskey and Zaragoza presented two choices, an object seen in the original event (i.e., a Coke can) and the object suggested in the misinformation (i.e., a Budweiser can).In the second condition, McCloskey and Zaragoza presented the object from the original event (i.e., the Coke can) with a distractor that was not part of the misinformation (i.e., a 7-Up can).They found that:
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If you false report a memory of an imagined event as really happening, your false memory has arisen because of ______ monitoring problems.
(Short Answer)
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Which is a valid and often-made criticism of the DRM procedure for inducing critical intrusions?
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Smith and Moynan (2008) were interested in testing the failure-to-rehearse hypothesis.They asked participants to study some neutral categories and some emotional ones.They found that:
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