Rf. Belli et al., MEMORY IMPAIRMENT AND SOURCE MISATTRIBUTION IN POSTEVENT MISINFORMATION EXPERIMENTS WITH SHORT RETENTION INTERVALS, Memory & cognition, 22(1), 1994, pp. 40-54
The four experiments reported here provide evidence that (1) misleadin
g postevent suggestions can impair memory for details in a witnessed e
vent and (2) subjects sometimes remember suggested details as things s
een in the event itself All four experiments used recall tests in whic
h subjects were warned of the possibility that the postevent informati
on included misleading suggestions and were instructed to report both
what they witnessed in the event and what was mentioned in the posteve
nt narrative. Recall of event details was poorer on misled items than
on control items, and subjects sometimes misidentified the sources of
their recollections. Our results suggest that these findings are not d
ue to guessing or response biases, but rather reflect genuine memory i
mpairment and source monitoring confusions.