False Memory Reading Group
Spring 2000
Memory is not an instrument for exploring the past but its theatre.
--Walter Benjamin


Ackil, J.K. & Zaragoza, M.S. (1998). Memorial consequences of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories. Developmental Psychology, 34, 1358-1372.

Arndt, J. & Hirshman, E. (1998). True and false recognition in MINERVA2: Explanations from a global matching perspective. Journal of Memory & Language, 39, 371-391.

Brainerd, C. J. & Reyna, V. F. (1998). Fuzzy-trace theory and children's false memories. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 71, 81-129.

Green, J. P., Lynn, S.J. & Malinoski, P. (1998). Hypnotic pseudomemories, prehypnotic warnings, and malleability of suggested memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 12, 431-444.

Higham, P.A. (1998). Believing details known to have been suggested. British Journal of Psychology, 89, 265-283. 

Kluft, R.P. (1997). The argument for the reality of delayed recall of trauma. In P.S. Appelbaum, L.A. Uyehara, & M.R. Elin (Eds). Trauma and Memory: Clinical and Legal Controversies. (pp. 25-57). Oxford: Oxford University Press. .

Miller, M.B. & Wolford, G.L. (1999). The role of criterion shift in false memories. Psychological Review, 106, 398-405.  (plus the response by Roediger & McDermott).

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.

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.

  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.

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., 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.
 
Wright, D.B. & Stroud, J.N. (1998). Memory quality and misinformation for peripheral and central objects. Legal & Criminological Psychology, 3, 273-286.



Important Legal Disclaimer: The preceding are articles we read together in the Lampinen Lab Spring 2000 False Memory Reading Group. By clicking on the button next to the article you can see the summary of that article. The summary was prepared by the student presenting that article and it is of course the case that the views expressed in the summary do not necessarily represent the views of the reading group as a whole, Dr. Lampinen, the Lampinen Lab, Hugo's, the University of Arkansas, the Razorback Football or Basketball teams (although we're not sure of the tennis squad), people living down the street from me, our extended families, people named George, the three surviving Beatles, or anyone else for that matter except for the student who wrote the summary (and they don't necessarily believe what they wrote either).


University of Arkansas
Department of Psychology
Lampinen Lab
False Memory Reading Group
Lampinen Publications