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Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Poster

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Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences. / Wilkinson, Samantha; Howe, Mark.
2012. Poster session presented at 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Minneapolis, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Poster

Harvard

Wilkinson, S & Howe, M 2012, 'Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences', 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Minneapolis, United States, 15/11/12 - 18/11/12. <http://psychonomic.org/abstract/onlineposters/details.cfm?id=4054>

APA

Wilkinson, S., & Howe, M. (2012). Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences. Poster session presented at 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Minneapolis, United States. http://psychonomic.org/abstract/onlineposters/details.cfm?id=4054

Vancouver

Wilkinson S, Howe M. Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences. 2012. Poster session presented at 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Minneapolis, United States.

Author

Wilkinson, Samantha ; Howe, Mark. / Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences. Poster session presented at 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Minneapolis, United States.

Bibtex

@conference{c6071198f1ff4e059c2f33fd8f5b7a4a,
title = "Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences",
abstract = "False memories have a tendency to persist over time, while true memories decline. Research has also shown that: (1) false memories generated using the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM; 1995) paradigm are more effective than true memories at priming insight-based problem solutions (compound remote associates task or CRAT) following a one-week delay; and (2) when valence is manipulated, false-negative memory rates increase over a delay interval. The current study examined the efficacy of true and false memory primes for positive and negative DRM lists on a set of CRATs. Two hundred and seventy participants studied either positive- or negative-themed DRM lists whose critical lures were also the solutions later CRATs that they attempted to solve either immediately or one week later. The critical lures were either generated by the participants (false memory) or included as part of the list (true memory). We found that false-negative memories were more effective problem-solving primes than true or positive memories particularly following a one-week delay.",
author = "Samantha Wilkinson and Mark Howe",
year = "2012",
month = nov,
language = "English",
note = "53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society ; Conference date: 15-11-2012 Through 18-11-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Negatively valenced false memories can and do have positive consequences

AU - Wilkinson, Samantha

AU - Howe, Mark

PY - 2012/11

Y1 - 2012/11

N2 - False memories have a tendency to persist over time, while true memories decline. Research has also shown that: (1) false memories generated using the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM; 1995) paradigm are more effective than true memories at priming insight-based problem solutions (compound remote associates task or CRAT) following a one-week delay; and (2) when valence is manipulated, false-negative memory rates increase over a delay interval. The current study examined the efficacy of true and false memory primes for positive and negative DRM lists on a set of CRATs. Two hundred and seventy participants studied either positive- or negative-themed DRM lists whose critical lures were also the solutions later CRATs that they attempted to solve either immediately or one week later. The critical lures were either generated by the participants (false memory) or included as part of the list (true memory). We found that false-negative memories were more effective problem-solving primes than true or positive memories particularly following a one-week delay.

AB - False memories have a tendency to persist over time, while true memories decline. Research has also shown that: (1) false memories generated using the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM; 1995) paradigm are more effective than true memories at priming insight-based problem solutions (compound remote associates task or CRAT) following a one-week delay; and (2) when valence is manipulated, false-negative memory rates increase over a delay interval. The current study examined the efficacy of true and false memory primes for positive and negative DRM lists on a set of CRATs. Two hundred and seventy participants studied either positive- or negative-themed DRM lists whose critical lures were also the solutions later CRATs that they attempted to solve either immediately or one week later. The critical lures were either generated by the participants (false memory) or included as part of the list (true memory). We found that false-negative memories were more effective problem-solving primes than true or positive memories particularly following a one-week delay.

M3 - Poster

T2 - 53rd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society

Y2 - 15 November 2012 through 18 November 2012

ER -