Cover Image: December 2005 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

False Memories [Preview]

Sudden recall of forgotten childhood abuse has sent people to prison. But Elizabeth Loftus says psychologists may be planting these events in patients' heads














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Elizabeth F. Loftus has been researching how our memories work since the early 1970s. The professor of psychology and law now teaches at the University of California, Irvine. Quick to come from her lips is contempt for the analogy that human memory works like a computer hard disk, on which data are cleanly written and from which data are accurately read back. Loftus says our memories are routinely wrong.

Indeed, we all have forgotten where we placed our keys or blanked on a name. But that is not all. Our memories can change over time. In our mental images, we often paint ourselves in rosy colors and make the good old days nicer than they really were.


This article was originally published with the title False Memories.



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False Memories: Scientific American Mind

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