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Not So Total Recall
July/August 2009
by Bruce Fellman
The day JFK was shot. The Challenger disaster. September 11. Ask most
people to tell you about highly charged emotional events, and, even many years
after the fact, you’ll get a picture that seems stunningly clear.
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Subjects remained convinced that they remembered their emotions accurately.
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Psychologists term this kind of recall "flashbulb
memory." But is it more accurate than our memories of run-of-the-mill events?
In a study about recollections of 9/11, a team of psychologists, including
Yale’s Marcia K. Johnson showed that the answer is no. (The work appears in the
May Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.)
The researchers developed a questionnaire to test
recall 1 week, 11 months, and 35 months after the attacks. (The intervals were
chosen to avoid anniversary news coverage.) Almost 400 people completed the
surveys. The results showed that the pattern of forgetting—both of facts and of
a subject’s own emotions—"looks like what we see in normal memories," says
Johnson. "Most of the forgetting happens early and then levels off.”
Subjects corrected some erroneous memories of the
facts over time, due to conversations and media accounts. But they remained convinced
that they remembered their emotions accurately. "If something seems vivid and
detailed, you feel it must be real," says Johnson. "Your internal fact-checker
is fooled.”  |