Book Read Free

The Memory Illusion

Page 28

by Dr Julia Shaw


  temporary insanity, 238

  wrongful convictions, 136, 143, 157, 218-21, 238-9, 255

  critical incident stress debriefing, 183-6

  critical thinking, xi, 189, 206

  cultural differences, 50-1

  Current Biology, 54

  D

  Dalhousie University, 161, 164

  data-driven processing, 32-3

  date-rape, 65

  David (Michelangelo), 25

  David, Meredith, 195

  Davis, Josh, 148-9

  Day, Martin, 168

  deep sleep, 117, 121, 122

  DeGrandis, Joey, 102

  DeLoache, Judy, 111

  dementia, 164

  dendrites, 58, 59, 61, 118

  depressants, 66

  depression, 102, 195, 227, 232

  Descartes, René, 56

  Deutsch, Morton, 201-2

  Devilly, Grant, 184

  Diana, Princess of Wales, 169

  Diekelmann, Susanne, 117

  digital amnesia, 203-6, 214

  Disney, 20-1, 25

  dissociation, 162-3

  distributional information, 43-4

  DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), 136

  Dodson, John, 38

  dreams, 118-19

  dressgate, 28-31

  driving, 137, 193-4

  DRM (Deese-Roediger-McDermott) test, 93

  DSM-V (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders), 103

  dualism, 56

  Duchaine, Brad, 149

  Duke University, 181, 202

  Durham University, 50

  E

  Eakin, Deborah, 242-3

  earliest memories, 2, 11-12

  Ebbinghaus, Hermann, 72-3

  education, xv, 37-8, 206

  eidetic memory, 90-2

  electrical noise, 190

  electroencephalography (EEG), 57, 120, 121, 190

  electromyography (EMG), 121, 190

  electrooculography (EOG), 121

  Emmons, William, 120

  emotion, 12-13, 36-42, 46, 50, 69, 104, 129, 159-77, 183-6

  engrams, 70, 75-8, 90, 96, 97, 107, 108, 117, 118, 119

  Engstler-Schooler, Tonya, 178

  epilepsy, 88

  episodic memory, xii-xiii, 4, 11, 14, 43, 46-51, 83-90, 95-8, 100-5, 199-200

  Epley, Nicholas, 207

  error-proneness, 79-80

  error-pruning, 212

  ESPCI ParisTech, 68

  excitotoxicity, 118

  extended adolescence, 14

  eyewitness testimony, 36, 40, 150, 151-2, 154, 165, 186, 197-8, 203, 212, 217-39, 254

  F

  face recognition, 147-54, 175-6, 178-9, 242-4

  exemplar-based model, 153

  learning strategies, 153

  own-age bias, 154

  own-gender bias, 154

  own-race bias, 152-3, 154

  prosopagnosia, 147-8

  super-recognisers, 148-9

  and trauma, 175-6

  and verbal overshadowing 178-9

  Facebook, xi, xii, 15, 28, 160, 189, 197, 203, 209-10, 214, 215

  Fairfield University, 180

  false memories, xiii-xv, 2-6, 12, 18-26, 32, 54-7, 69-71, 74-81, 93-6, 128-33, 155-8, 159-82, 195-239, 247, 254

  and association, 74-81, 119

  borrowing, 199-200, 213

  brainwashing, 129-33

  of childhood, 2-6

  confabulation, 3-4, 6, 21

  and conformity, 197-8, 200-3

  crime, 155-8, 217-39

  emotion, 159-77, 184, 186

  error-proneness, 79-80

  flashbulb memories, 165-9

  hacking, 5-6, 170-5, 180-2, 247

  and HSAMs, 93-5

  and hypnosis, 19-20, 128-9, 227-33

  impossible memories, 3-4, 18-26, 128-9

  and interview techniques, 170, 222-5

  location cells, 69-71

  merging of stimuli, 54-6, 57

  optogenetics, 70-1

  parallel processing, 79

  and perception, 32

  phantom recollective experiences, 80

  and photographs, 180-2, 207-10

  and psychoanalysis, 19, 228-33

  separate recall, 79

  and social media, 195-7, 203-6, 209, 214-15

  source confusion, 3-4, 200

  syndrome, 236-8

  and trauma, 104, 129, 160-5, 175-7, 184, 186, 217-39

  verbal overshadowing, 177-80, 184, 186

  and vividness, 80

  wild, in the, 175-7

  False Memory Archive, 22-5, 167

  feeling of knowing, 241-4

  Feld, Gordon, 117

  Fells Acres Day Care Center, Malden, 218-26

  Fenton, André, 102

  fibromyalgia, 125

  flashbulb memories, 165-9

  Flavell, John, 23

  Flinders University, 150

  Flom, Ross, 12-13

  fluid intelligence, 245

  fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging), 15, 57, 58, 68, 103

  Foer, Joshua, 253-4

  forgetting, 11-15, 18, 20, 26, 37-8, 64-8, 80, 89, 92, 99-100, 102-5, 143-7, 162-5, 203-6, 214-15

  and arousal, 37-8

  and autism, 99-100

  and benzodiazepines, 65-8

  childhood amnesia, 11-15, 18, 20, 26

  digital amnesia, 203-6, 214

  dissociative amnesia, 162-3

  importance of, 102-5

  mnestic block syndrome, 163-4

  and prospective memory, 143-7

  retrieval induced, 64-5, 214

  fourth dimension, 42

  Fowler, James, 138

  free trials, 144-5, 254

  Freeman, Walter, 9

  French, Chris, 231

  frequency, law of, 72

  Freud, Sigmund, 19, 228-33

  frontal lobe, 8, 13

  Furl, Nicholas, 147

  futurology, 71

  fuzzy trace theory, 78-80

  G

  GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), 66, 164

  Gabbert, Fiona, 197

  Gary, Maryanne, 181

  Gaskell, George, 47-8

  Gegenfurtner, Karl, 29

  generic memory, see semantic memory

  Georgia Institute of Technology, 251

  Geraci, Lisa, 250

  Gerard, Harold, 201-2

  Gibson, James and Eleanor, 32

  Giessen University, 29, 154

  Giray, Enrol, 92

  gist memory, 78-80, 115

  glucocorticoids, 164

  glutamate, 117-18

  good old days, 50

  Google, 36, 44, 83, 196, 203-6, 214

  gorilla experiment, 114

  Gray, Cynthia, 92

  groupiness, 142, 200-3

  Guardian, 1

  guilty until proven innocent, 233-6, 238

  Gummerman, Kent, 92

  Guyer, Melvin, 228

  H

  hacking memories, 5-6, 170-5, 180-2, 247

  hallucinations, 88

  Hampstead, London, 229

  Hanson, Lisa, 99

  Harris, Celia, 210, 212

  Hart, Joseph, 241-2

  Hart, Stephen, xi

  Harvard University, 13, 16, 20, 114, 148, 166

  Heaney, Seamus, ix

  Hebl, Michelle, 236

  hedge funds, 140

  Henkel, Linda, 180

  Henner, Marilyn, 87

  Hennevin, Elizabeth, 121

  Hillsborough football disaster (1989), 48

  hippocampus, 13, 14, 70-1, 89-90, 100

  Holman, Jeff, 144-5

  Holocaust, 130

  Hopwood, A. R., 22, 167

  hot-air balloons, 21-2, 181-2

  HPA axis, 39

  Hulme, Charles, 246

  Hunt, Kathryn, 53-6, 57

  Huttenlocher, Peter, 17

  Hyman, Ira, 4, 6, 114-15, 174

  hypermnesia, 163

  hyperthymesia (HSAMs), 83-90, 9
2-8, 99, 100, 101-3

  hypnosis, 19-20, 107, 119-20, 123-9, 227-33

  I

  Icahn School of Medicine, 119

  identification, 40, 148-54, 175-7, 178-9, 242-3

  and overconfidence, 149-51

  own-age bias, 154

  own-gender bias, 154

  own-race bias, 151-3, 154

  self, 206-10

  super-recognisers, 148-9

  and trauma, 40, 175-7

  and verbal overshadowing 178-9

  identity, x-xii, 51, 101, 215

  Illinois State University, 194

  illusion of asymmetric insight, 141-3

  illusions, 27-8, 36

  impossible memories, 3-4, 18-26, 128-9, 169, 228

  in-groups, 142, 202-3

  informational influences, 201-2

  Innocence Project, 136, 239

  Internet, ix, xi, 15, 28-9, 30, 160, 187, 189-90, 195-7, 203-6, 209, 213-15

  interrogation, 175-7, 222, 247

  interview techniques, 170, 222-5

  inverted-U hypothesis, 38-9

  Iowa State University, 64

  Iraq War (2003-11), 159-61

  irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), 125

  J

  Jackson, Michael, 168

  Jaeggi, Susanne, 245-6

  Janssen, Steve, 50, 51

  Jobs, Steve, 140

  Johns Hopkins University, 222

  Johnson, Dominic, 138

  judgement of learning, 145

  Junco, Reynol, 189-90

  K

  Kagan, Jerome, 13-14

  Kahneman, Daniel, 43

  Kandel, Eric, 61-2

  Kapersky Lab, 205

  Kat, Harry, 140

  Kelley, Susan, 219

  Kelly, Lynne, 194

  Kelowna, British Columbia, 195-7

  Kemper, Thomas, 99-100

  Kendall-Tackett, Kathleen, 225

  Kennedy, John Fitzgerald, 47, 165

  Kent State University, 115

  Kilpatrick, Dean, 185

  Kirsch, Irving, 126

  Knickmeyer, Rebecca, 15

  Koivisto, Mila, 131

  Koriat, Asher, 146

  Kornell, Nate, 145-7

  Korva, Natasha, 34

  Kuhl, Brice, 102

  Kulic, James, 166-9

  L

  landmarks, 47-9

  language development, 111-13

  LaPaglia, Jessica, 64

  Latimer, Jason, 27

  Laval University, 46

  Lavilléon, Gaetan de, 68

  laws of association, 72

  Le Doux, Joseph, 62

  Letterman, David, 159

  Levin, Daniel, 115

  Lie Eunhui, 14

  limbic-prefrontal system, 100

  Lindsay, Stephen, 181-2, 231

  LinkedIn, xi

  Liu Xu, 69

  lobotomies, 9

  location cells, 69-71

  Lock Haven University, 189

  Locke, John, 72

  Loftus, Elizabeth, 12, 96, 228, 254-5

  London riots (2011), 149

  London School of Economics, 47-8

  London South Bank University, 135

  London, Kamala, 224, 225

  long-term memory, 6, 11-14, 20, 58-65, 70

  long-term potentiation, 60, 62

  M

  MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory, 112

  magic shows, 27-8, 36

  magical realism, 253

  magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), 15, 57, 58, 68, 103

  Magnussen, Svien, 165

  Maier, Simon, 100

  Making Monsters (Ofshe and Watters), 157

  Malden, Massachusetts, 217

  Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, The (Sacks), 148

  marketing, 130-1, 144-5, 254

  Markowitsch, Hans, 163

  Marsh, Elizabeth, 181

  Massachusetts General Hospital, 99-100

  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 69, 188, 190

  Mather, Mara, 39

  Matrix, The, 71

  maturation, 6-18

  Mazzoni, Guiliana, 123

  McGaugh, James, 36, 83-4, 86

  media, ix, xi, xv, 15, 28-30, 110-13, 128, 130-1, 159-61, 165, 187, 189-90, 195-7, 203-6, 209, 213-15

  Medical University of South Carolina, 185

  mediodorsal nucleus, 16

  Melby-Lervåg, Monica, 246-7

  Melinder, Annika, 165

  Memon, Amina, 197

  memory

  amnesia, 11-15, 18, 20, 26, 65-8, 89, 99-100, 162-4, 203-6, 214

  and arousal, 36-42

  association, 71-81, 96, 109, 119, 121, 249-53

  and attention, 107-33

  borrowing, 199-200, 213

  change blindness, 115

  childhood, xiii, 1-26, 92, 96, 109-13, 129

  chunking, 10-11, 17

  collaborative, 210-13

  conceptual representations, 115

  confabulation, 3-4, 6, 21

  and conformity, 197-8, 200-3

  cultural differences, 50-1

  distributional information, 43-4

  eidetic, 90-2

  and emotion, 12-13, 36-42, 46, 50, 69, 104, 129, 159-77, 183-6

  episodic, xii-xiii, 4, 11, 14, 43, 46-51, 83-90, 95-8, 100-5, 199-200

  error-proneness, 79-80

  false, xiii-xv, 4, 5, 12, 18-26, 32, 54-6, 57, 69-71, 74-81, 93-6, 128-33, 155-8, 159-82, 195-239

  flashbulb, 165-9

  forgetting, 11-15, 18, 20, 26, 37, 45, 64-8, 80, 89, 92, 99-100, 102-5, 143-7, 162-5, 203-6, 214-15

  gist, 78-80, 115

  hacking, 5-6, 170-5, 180-2, 247

  hyperthymesia (HSAMs), 83-90, 92-8, 99, 100, 101-3

  and hypnosis, 19, 107, 119-20, 123-9

  impossible, 3-4, 18-26

  landmarks, 47-9

  long-term, 6, 11-14, 20, 58-65, 70

  maturation, 6-18

  merging of stimuli, 54-6, 57

  metamemory, 23-6, 146, 241-4

  mnemonics, 124, 247-53

  as network, 68-81, 96

  overconfidence, 135-47, 150, 157-8, 167, 168, 237, 243

  parallel processing, 79

  and perception, 27-52, 107-8

  photographic, 90-2

  and photographs, 180-2, 207-10

  post-event information, 198

  priming, 132-3

  prospective, 44-6, 143-7

  reminiscence bump, 50-1

  repressed, 161, 163, 225, 228-33

  retrieval induced forgetting, 64-5, 214

  retrieval practice, 213-14

  and schemas, 9, 33-6

  semantic, xii, 11, 58, 100

  separate recall, 79

  short-term, 6-11, 17, 55, 115, 190, 245-7

  and sleep, 117-22

  and social media, 195-7, 203-6, 209, 213-15

  source confusion, 3-4, 200

  spatial information, 68, 70

  spreading activation model, 95-8, 97

  stamping, 58-65

  state-dependent memory, 40-2

  superior, 85-6

  superiority illusion, 138-40

  suppression of, 102-4, 161, 249

  and task-switching, 189-95

  temporal displacement, 48-9

  training, 244-7

  traumatic, 104, 129, 160-5, 175-7, 183-6, 217-39

  verbal overshadowing, 177-80, 184, 186

  verbatim, 78-80, 85

  visual, 88, 90-2, 177, 179

  and vividness, 80

  wizards, 83-105

  working, 7, 190, 245-7

  Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology (Hermann), 73

  Memory from a Broader Perspective (Searleman), 91

  Memory Mechanisms (Penfield), 87

  memory palaces, 252-3

  merging of stimuli, 54-6, 57

  metamemory, 23-6, 146, 241-4

  Metropolitan Police, 148-9

  mice, 69-70, 118

  Michelle Remembers (Smith and P
azder), 227-9

  Mickey Mouse, 20

  Miles, Caroline, 12

  Miller-Ott, Aimee, 194

  Miller, Earl, 188, 190-2

  Miller, George, 7, 10

  Milner, Brenda, 88-9

  mind mapping, 97-8

  mindblindness, 101

  minimal-value deletion, 18

  Minnesota University, 23

  misinformation tasks, 5-6, 93-5, 170-6, 180-2

  Mississippi State University, 242

  Mitchell, Jeffrey, 183

  mnemonics, 124, 247-53

  mnestic block syndrome, 163-4

  monism, 56

  Moniz, Egas, 9

  monkeys, 191-2

  monosodium glutamate (MSG), 117

  Morgan, Charles, 176-7

  Morrison, Kristin, 251

  motor cortex, 88

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 110

  multitasking, 188-95

  N

  n-back, 245-6

  Nader, Karim, 62

  Nahum, Louis, 3

  Nakayama, Ken, 149

  National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), 225

  Nature, 138

  Nature Neuroscience, 69, 109

  NBC (National Broadcasting Company), 159

  Netherlands, 50

  networks, memories as, 68-81, 96

  neurons, 16, 57-61, 68-71, 88, 96, 105, 117, 190-2

  biological stamping, 58-65

  dendrites, 58, 59, 61, 118

  electrical noise, 190

  long-term potentiation, 60

  networks of, 68-71

  optogenetics, 70-1

  plasticity, 57-8

  pruning, 16

  sleep, 117

  synchrony, 190-2

  New York Magazine, 102

  New York University, 62, 102, 118, 201

  New Yorker, 118

  Newcombe, Nora, 14

  ‘No A 4 U’ (Junco and Cotton), 189

  Nobel Prize, ix, 9, 61, 69, 229, 230

  nodes, 73-4

  nonsense syllables, 72-3

  normative influences, 201-2

  NPR (National Public Radio), 102

  O

  O’Keefe, John, 69

  Obama, Barack, 58

  Ofshe, Richard, 157

  Oliver Sacks, 148

  On Memory and Reminiscence (Aristotle), 72

  optogenetics, 70-1

  otherness, 154

  Ottawa, Ontario, 18

  out-groups, 142, 202-3

  overconfidence, 135-47, 150, 157-8, 167-8, 237, 243

  own-age bias, 154

  own-gender bias, 154

  own-race bias, 152-3, 154

  P

  Palmer, Matthew, 150

  paradoxical sleep, 121-2

  parallel processing, 79

  parietal lobe, 8

  parietotemporal cortex, 88

  passports, 209

  Patihis, Lawrence, 86, 93, 124, 232

  Pazder, Lawrence, 227-9

  Peace, Kristine, 164

  Peek, Francis, 99

  Peek, Kim, 98, 99

  Penfield, Wilder, 87-90

  Pennsylvania, United States, 94

  Pentland, Joel, 4

  perception, xiv, 27-52, 100, 107-8, 115, 128, 131-2, 148, 150, 166, 206-10

  and arousal, 36-42

  bottom-up processing, 32-3, 34

  of colour, 28-31

  and schemas, 9, 33-6

 

‹ Prev