Increasing False Recognition Rates with Confirmatory Feedback: A Phenomenological Analysis
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- Published by University of Illinois Press in The American Journal of Psychology
- Vol. 116 (4) , 515-25
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1423658
Abstract
During a simulated witness interrogation, participants were encouraged to confabulate an account consistent with false information concerning a videotaped event. The interviewer verbally affirmed some false responses. Previous research has shown that, a week later, participants often recognize confabulated events that were affirmed by the experimenter as being from the video. What is unclear is whether confirmatory feedback encouraged a change in the mental representation of the confabulated events to fit the original event or confirmation might have merely encouraged a change in beliefs about the event. To further understand the mechanisms that underlie the confirmatory feedback effect, participants were asked to judge the phenomenological experience associated with false recognition.Keywords
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