Confabulation is usually assumed to result from a deficit in either the mem
ory verification processes alone or in both the search and the verification
processes. The present study concerns a patient who, in contrast to other
patients, displayed confabulations but had preserved memory verification ab
ilities. She exhibited only a selective impairment of the search processes.
Recognition abilities were preserved, and cued recall was better than free
recall. On the latter task, she recalled fewer correct items and produced
more intrusions than control subjects. The patient had normal performance i
n several tests usually assumed to tap "executive functions." It is thus co
ncluded that an impairment in verification, regardless of whether it is spe
cific or not to memory, is not a necessary component of confabulations. The
case is discussed in relation to two memory control processes models (Burg
ess & Shallice, 1996a; Moscovitch, 1989, 1995; Moscovitch & Melo, 1997), to
the Source Monitoring Framework (Johnson, Hashtroudi, & Lindsay, 1993), an
d to the Constructive Memory Framework (Schacter, Norman, & Koutstaal, 1998
). We proposed new hypotheses about possible deficits in the search process
so as to account for the difference between amnesic patients with and with
out confabulations.