Creating False Memories
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In 1986 Nadean Cool, a nurse's aide in Wisconsin, sought therapy
from a psychiatrist to help her cope with her reaction to a traumatic event
experienced by her daughter. During therapy, the psychiatrist used hypnosis and
other suggestive techniques to dig out buried memories of abuse that Cool
herself had allegedly experienced. In the process, Cool became convinced that
she had repressed memories of having been in a satanic cult, of eating babies,
of being raped, of having sex with animals and of being forced to watch the
murder of her eight-year-old friend. She came to believe that she had more than
120 personalities-children, adults, angels and even a duck-all because, Cool was
told, she had experienced severe childhood sexual and physical abuse. The
psychiatrist also performed exorcisms on her, one of which lasted for five hours
and included the sprinkling of holy water and screams for Satan to leave Cool's
body.
When Cool finally realized that false memories had been planted, she sued the
psychiatrist for malpractice. In March 1997, after five weeks of trial, her case
was settled out of court for $2.4 million. Nadean Cool is not the only patient
to develop false memories as a result of questionable therapy. In Missouri in
1992 a church counselor helped Beth Rutherford to remember during therapy that
her father, a clergyman, had regularly raped her between the ages of seven and
14 and that her mother sometimes helped him by holding her down. Under her
therapist's guidance, Rutherford developed memories of her father twice
impregnating her and forcing her to abort the fetus herself with a coat
hanger.The father had to resign from his post as a clergyman when the
allegations were made public. Later medical examination of the daughter
revealed, however, that she was still a virgin at age 22 and had never been
pregnant. The daughter sued the therapist and received a $1-million settlement
in 1996.
About a year earlier two juries returned verdicts against a Minnesota
psychiatrist accused of planting false memories by former patients Vynnette
Hamanne and Elizabeth Carlson, who under hypnosis and sodium amytal, and after
being fed misinformation about the workings of memory, had come to remember
horrific abuse by family members. The juries awarded Hammane $2.67 million and
Carlson $2.5 million for their ordeals.
In all four cases, the women developed memories about childhood abuse in therapy
and then later denied their authenticity. How can we determine if memories of
childhood abuse are true or false? Without corroboration, it is very difficult
to differentiate between false memories and true ones. Also, in these cases,
some memories were contrary to physical evidence, such as explicit and detailed
recollections of rape and abortion when medical examination confirmed virginity.
How is it possible for people to acquire elaborate and confident false memories?
A growing number of investigations demonstrate that under the right
circumstances false memories can be instilled rather easily in some people.
My own research into memory distortion goes back to the early 1970s, when I
began studies of the "misinformation effect." These studies show that when
people who witness an event are later exposed to new and misleading information
about it, their recollections often become distorted. In one example,
participants viewed a simulated automobile accident at an intersection with a
stop sign. After the viewing, half the participants received a suggestion that
the traffic sign was a yield sign. When asked later what traffic sign they
remembered seeing at the intersection, those who had been given the suggestion
tended to claim that they had seen a yield sign. Those who had not received the
phony information were much more accurate in their recollection of the traffic
sign.
My students and I have now conducted more than 200 experiments involving over
20,000 individuals that document how exposure to misinformation induces memory
distortion. In these studies, people "recalled" a conspicuous barn in a bucolic
scene that contained no buildings at all, broken glass and tape recorders that
were not in the scenes they viewed, a white instead of a blue vehicle in a crime
scene, and Minnie Mouse when they actually saw Mickey Mouse. Taken together,
these studies show that misinformation can change an individual's recollection
in predictable and sometimes very powerful ways.
Misinformation has the potential for invading our memories when we talk to other
people, when we are suggestively interrogated or when we read or view media
coverage about some event that we may have experienced ourselves. After more
than two decades of exploring the power of misinformation, researchers have
learned a great deal about the conditions that make people susceptible to memory
modification. Memories are more easily modified, for instance, when the passage
of time allows the original memory to fade.
Elizabeth F. Loftus
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