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Original Articles

Overcoming Misinformation Effects in Eyewitness Memory: Effects of Encoding Time and Event Cues

Pages 725-740 | Published online: 15 Oct 2010

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Read on this site (2)

Helen Wyler & Margit E. Oswald. (2016) Why misinformation is reported: evidence from a warning and a source-monitoring task. Memory 24:10, pages 1419-1434.
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Peter Frost, Melissa Ingraham & Beth Wilson. (2002) Why misinformation is more likely to be recognised over time: A source monitoring account. Memory 10:3, pages 179-185.
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Articles from other publishers (3)

Elizabeth F. Chua, Erin Rand-Giovannetti, Daniel L. Schacter, Marilyn S. Albert & Reisa A. Sperling. (2004) Dissociating Confidence and Accuracy: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Shows Origins of the Subjective Memory Experience. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 16:7, pages 1131-1142.
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David M. Diamond, Collin R. Park & James C. Woodson. (2004) Stress generates emotional memories and retrograde amnesia by inducing an endogenous form of hippocampal LTP. Hippocampus 14:3, pages 281-291.
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Peter Frost. (2000) The quality of false memory over time: Is memory for misinformation “remembered” or “known”?. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 7:3, pages 531-536.
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