scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1002/BSL.2095 |
P8608 | Fatcat ID | release_2i5n2hqdezefffukwusyvmxtpa |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 24108575 |
P50 | author | Henry Otgaar | Q90482396 |
P2093 | author name string | Melanie Sauerland | |
John P Petrila | |||
P2860 | cites work | Failure to detect mismatches between intention and outcome in a simple decision task | Q28275932 |
Developmental reversals in false memory: a review of data and theory | Q31153906 | ||
The nature of real, implanted, and fabricated memories for emotional childhood events: implications for the recovered memory debate | Q33874113 | ||
Misinformation effects in eyewitness memory: The presence and absence of memory impairment as a function of warning and misinformation accessibility | Q33972833 | ||
Planting misinformation in the human mind: a 30-year investigation of the malleability of memory | Q33988735 | ||
Suggestibility of the child witness: a historical review and synthesis | Q34061279 | ||
Decisions and the evolution of memory: multiple systems, multiple functions | Q34126742 | ||
Children (but not adults) can inhibit false memories. | Q34470892 | ||
More than suggestion: the effect of interviewing techniques from the McMartin Preschool case | Q34748594 | ||
What research paradigms have cognitive psychologists used to study "false memory," and what are the implications of these choices? | Q36255632 | ||
False claims about false memory research | Q36576279 | ||
False memories and fantastic beliefs: 15 years of the DRM illusion | Q37797800 | ||
Adaptive memory: Survival processing increases both true and false memory in adults and children. | Q38372479 | ||
Adaptive memory: survival processing enhances retention. | Q38398616 | ||
A brighter side to memory illusions: false memories prime children's and adults' insight-based problem solving. | Q38498159 | ||
Effects of emotional valence and arousal on recollective and nonrecollective recall | Q43405460 | ||
Imaging the reconstruction of true and false memories using sensory reactivation and the misinformation paradigms | Q46889261 | ||
Experimentally evoking nonbelieved memories for childhood events. | Q47182393 | ||
Script knowledge enhances the development of children's false memories | Q48973481 | ||
Valence and the development of immediate and long-term false memory illusions. | Q50697794 | ||
The origin of children's implanted false memories: memory traces or compliance? | Q50769528 | ||
Children's false memories: easier to elicit for a negative than for a neutral event. | Q50792514 | ||
On the susceptibility of adaptive memory to false memory illusions. | Q51857215 | ||
Event plausibility does not determine children's false memories. | Q51910664 | ||
A picture is worth a thousand lies: using false photographs to create false childhood memories. | Q51952443 | ||
Adaptive memory: the comparative value of survival processing. | Q51964331 | ||
Misleading postevent information and memory for events: arguments and evidence against memory impairment hypotheses. | Q52207179 | ||
Current Issues and Advances in Misinformation Research | Q56001398 | ||
Creating false memories: Remembering words not presented in lists | Q56168703 | ||
When Eyewitnesses Talk | Q56610507 | ||
P433 | issue | 5 | |
P921 | main subject | memory formation | Q107596539 |
P304 | page(s) | 531-540 | |
P577 | publication date | 2013-09-30 | |
P1433 | published in | Behavioral Sciences and the Law | Q15762151 |
P1476 | title | Novel shifts in memory research and their impact on the legal process: introduction to the special issue on memory formation and suggestibility in the legal process. | |
P478 | volume | 31 |
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