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Original Articles

Recall Accuracy and Illusory Memories: When More is Less

Pages 233-256 | Published online: 21 Oct 2010

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (45)

Lauren Knott, Samantha Wilkinson, Maria Hellenthal, Datin Shah & Mark L. Howe. (2022) Generative processing and emotional false memories: a generation “cost” for negative false memory formation but only after delay. Cognition and Emotion 36:7, pages 1448-1457.
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Xinyi Lu, Megan O. Kelly & Evan F. Risko. (2022) The gist of it: offloading memory does not reduce the benefit of list categorisation. Memory 30:4, pages 396-411.
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Jennifer H. Coane, Dawn M. McBride & Shuofeng Xu. (2020) The feature boost in false memory: the roles of monitoring and critical item identifiability. Memory 28:4, pages 481-493.
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Marek Nieznański & Michał Obidziński. (2019) Verbatim and gist memory and individual differences in inhibition, sustained attention, and working memory capacity. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 31:1, pages 16-33.
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Andrew Parker & Neil Dagnall. (2018) Associative false consumer memory: effects of need for cognition and encoding task. Memory 26:4, pages 559-573.
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Mark L. Howe & Sarah R. Garner. (2018) Can false memories prime alternative solutions to ambiguous problems?. Memory 26:1, pages 96-105.
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Paula Carneiro, Leonel Garcia-Marques, Ana Lapa & Angel Fernandez. (2017) Explaining the persistence of false memories: a proposal based on associative activation and thematic extraction. Memory 25:8, pages 986-998.
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Indira C. Turney, Nancy A. Dennis, David Maillet & M. Natasha Rajah. (2017) Exploring the influence of encoding format on subsequent memory. Memory 25:5, pages 686-696.
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Marlène Abadie, Laurent Waroquier & Patrice Terrier. (2016) Information presentation format moderates the unconscious-thought effect: The role of recollection. Memory 24:8, pages 1123-1133.
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Vincent Prohaska, Debbie DelValle, Michael P. Toglia & Anna E. Pittman. (2016) Reported serial positions of true and illusory memories in the Deese/Roediger/McDermott paradigm. Memory 24:7, pages 865-883.
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Stephen A. Dewhurst, James M. Rackie & Lotte van Esch. (2016) Not lost in translation: writing auditorily presented words at study increases correct recognition “at no cost”. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 28:4, pages 437-442.
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Jennifer H. Coane, Mark J. Huff & Keith A. Hutchison. (2016) The ironic effect of guessing: increased false memory for mediated lists in younger and older adults. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 23:3, pages 282-303.
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Alina-Alexandra Sava, Claire Paquet, Julien Dumurgier, Jacques Hugon & Hanna Chainay. (2016) The role of attention in emotional memory enhancement in pathological and healthy aging. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 38:4, pages 434-454.
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Michael J. Tat & Tamiko Azuma. (2016) The effect of cognitive load on hemispheric asymmetries in true and false memory. Laterality 21:1, pages 50-75.
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Paula Carneiro, Leonel Garcia-Marques, Angel Fernandez & Pedro Albuquerque. (2014) Both associative activation and thematic extraction count, but thematic false memories are more easily rejected. Memory 22:8, pages 1024-1040.
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Susan M. Sherman & Jo Kennerley. (2014) The organisation of musical semantic memory: Evidence from false memories for familiar songs. Memory 22:7, pages 852-860.
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Henry Otgaar, Mark L. Howe, Tom Smeets & Sarah R. Garner. (2014) Developmental trends in adaptive memory. Memory 22:1, pages 103-117.
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KathrynA. LaTour, MichaelS. LaTour & Charles Brainerd. (2014) Fuzzy Trace Theory and “Smart” False Memories: Implications for Advertising. Journal of Advertising 43:1, pages 3-17.
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SusanM. Sherman. (2013) False recall and recognition of brand names increases over time. Memory 21:2, pages 219-229.
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David R. Cann, Ken McRae & Albert N. Katz. (2011) False recall in the Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm: The roles of gist and associative strength. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 64:8, pages 1515-1542.
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Mary Ann Foley, Jeffrey Foy, Emily Schlemmer & Janna Belser-Ehrlich. (2010) Imagery encoding and false recognition errors: Examining the role of imagery process and imagery content on source misattributions. Memory 18:8, pages 801-821.
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Wei Bin Mao, Zhi Liang Yang & Lin Song Wang. (2010) Modality effect in false recognition: Evidence from Chinese characters . International Journal of Psychology 45:1, pages 4-11.
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MarkL. Howe, Ingrid Candel, Henry Otgaar, Catherine Malone & MarinaC. Wimmer. (2010) Valence and the development of immediate and long-term false memory illusions. Memory 18:1, pages 58-75.
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CarmenE. Westerberg, VaughnR. Steele & ChadJ. Marsolek. (2008) Reversing presentation order of semantically related words reverses memory. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 20:1, pages 69-90.
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Jerwen Jou & Joseph Foreman. (2007) Transfer of learning in avoiding false memory: The roles of warning, immediate feedback, and incentive. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 60:6, pages 877-896.
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James Michael Lampinen, JulianaK. Leding, KellyB. Reed & TimothyN. Odegard. (2006) Global gist extraction in children and adults. Memory 14:8, pages 952-964.
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DavidP. McCabe & AndersonD. Smith. (2006) The distinctiveness heuristic in false recognition and false recall. Memory 14:5, pages 570-583.
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JohnG. Seamon, JeffreyR. Berko, Brooke Sahlin, Yi-Lo Yu, JenniferM. Colker & DavidH. Gottfried. (2006) Can false memories spontaneously recover?. Memory 14:4, pages 415-423.
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Laura Campos & María Alonso-Quecuty. (2006) Remembering a criminal conversation: Beyond eyewitness testimony. Memory 14:1, pages 27-36.
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Stephen Dewhurst, Christopher Barry & Selina Holmes. (2005) Exploring the false recognition of category exemplars: Effects of divided attention and explicit generation. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 17:6, pages 803-819.
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John G. Seamon, Chun R. Luo, Elizabeth P. Shulman, Sarah K. Toner & Selin Caglar. (2002) False memories are hard to inhibit: Differential effects of directed forgetting on accurate and false recall in the DRM procedure. Memory 10:4, pages 225-237.
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StuartJ. McKelvie. (2001) Effects of Free and Forced Retrieval Instructions on False Recall and Recognition. The Journal of General Psychology 128:3, pages 261-278.
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Jeffrey S. Neuschatz, David G. Payne, James M. Lampinen & Michael P. Toglia. (2001) Assessing the effectiveness of warnings and the phenomenological characteristics of false memories. Memory 9:1, pages 53-71.
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Richard L. Marsh & Jason L. Hicks. (2001) Output monitoring tests reveal false memories of memories that never existed. Memory 9:1, pages 39-51.
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James M. Lampinen & Rachel M. Schwartz. (2000) The impersistence of false memory persistence. Memory 8:6, pages 393-400.
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David A. Balota, Michael J. Cortese, Janet M. Duchek, David Adams, Henry L. Roediger$suffix/text()$suffix/text(), Kathleen B. McDermott & Benjamin E. Yerys. (1999) VERIDICAL AND FALSE MEMORIES IN HEALTHY OLDER ADULTS AND IN DEMENTIA OF THE ALZHEIMER'S TYPE. Cognitive Neuropsychology 16:3-5, pages 361-384.
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Articles from other publishers (137)

Matthew H. C. Mak, Alice O'Hagan, Aidan J. Horner & M. Gareth Gaskell. (2023) A registered report testing the effect of sleep on Deese-Roediger-McDermott false memory: greater lure and veridical recall but fewer intrusions after sleep. Royal Society Open Science 10:12.
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C.J. Brainerd & Valerie F. Reyna. (2023) Theoretical explanations of developmental reversals in memory and reasoning. Developmental Review 69, pages 101087.
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Changsheng Lai. (2022) Memory, Knowledge, and Epistemic Luck. The Philosophical Quarterly 72:4, pages 896-917.
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Michael P. Toglia, Joseph Schmuller, Britni G. Surprenant, Katherine C. Hooper, Natasha N. DeMeo & Brett L. Wallace. (2022) Novel Approaches and Cognitive Neuroscience Perspectives on False Memory and Deception. Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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Melike Guzey & Banu Yılmaz. (2021) False recognitions in the DRM paradigm: the role of stress and warning. Cognitive Processing 23:1, pages 99-107.
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Michael P. Toglia, Garrett L. Berman, Kristina Todorovic, Danielle M. Rumschik & Shelley L. Thibodeau. 2022. Advances in Psychology and Law. Advances in Psychology and Law 111 144 .
Patricia I. Coburn, Kirandeep K. Dogra, Iarenjit K. Rai & Daniel M. Bernstein. (2021) The Trajectory of Targets and Critical Lures in the Deese/Roediger–McDermott Paradigm: A Systematic Review. Frontiers in Psychology 12.
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Durna Alakbarova, Jason L. Hicks & B. Hunter Ball. (2021) The influence of semantic context on false memories. Memory & Cognition 49:8, pages 1555-1567.
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M. Chang & C.J. Brainerd. (2021) Semantic and phonological false memory: A review of theory and data. Journal of Memory and Language 119, pages 104210.
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Jennifer H. Coane, Dawn M. McBride, Mark J. Huff, Kai Chang, Elizabeth M. Marsh & Kendal A. Smith. (2021) Manipulations of List Type in the DRM Paradigm: A Review of How Structural and Conceptual Similarity Affect False Memory. Frontiers in Psychology 12.
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C.J. Brainerd, D.M. Bialer & M. Chang. (2020) Norming retrieval processes. Journal of Memory and Language 115, pages 104143.
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Xinyi Lu, Megan O. Kelly & Evan F. Risko. (2020) Offloading information to an external store increases false recall. Cognition 205, pages 104428.
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David G. Nagy, Balázs Török & Gergő Orbán. (2020) Optimal forgetting: Semantic compression of episodic memories. PLOS Computational Biology 16:10, pages e1008367.
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Marek Nieznański. (2020) Levels-of-processing effects on context and target recollection for words and pictures. Acta Psychologica 209, pages 103127.
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Juliana K. Leding. (2020) Animacy and threat in recognition memory. Memory & Cognition 48:5, pages 788-799.
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Melissa E Meade, Michael D Klein & Myra A Fernandes. (2019) The benefit (and cost) of drawing as an encoding strategy. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 73:2, pages 199-210.
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Donna Gift Cabalo, Francesco Ianì, A. Reyyan Bilge & Giuliana Mazzoni. (2019) Memory distortions: When suggestions cannot be easily ignored. Applied Cognitive Psychology 34:1, pages 106-118.
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Anat Adi Shapira & Ainat Pansky. (2019) Cognitive and metacognitive determinants of eyewitness memory accuracy over time. Metacognition and Learning 14:3, pages 437-461.
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Mark J Huff & Glen E Bodner. (2018) Item-specific and relational processing both improve recall accuracy in the DRM paradigm. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:6, pages 1493-1506.
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Kedarmal Verma & Naveen Kashyap. (2019) Sleep deprivation enhances false memory on the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) task. Psychological Thought 12:1, pages 120-130.
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Helena M Oliveira, Pedro B Albuquerque & Magda Saraiva. (2018) Associative strength or gist extraction: Which matters when DRM lists have two critical lures?. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:3, pages 570-578.
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Keith A. Hutchison & David A. Balota. (2005) Decoupling semantic and associative information in false memories: Explorations with semantically ambiguous and unambiguous critical lures. Journal of Memory and Language 52:1, pages 1-28.
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David P. Mccabe, Alison G. Presmanes, Chuck L. Robertson & Anderson D. Smith. (2004) Item-specific processing reduces false memories. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 11:6, pages 1074-1079.
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Akira Mukai. (2016) False Recall for People's Names in the Deese-Roediger-Mcdermott Paradigm: Conspicuousness and Semantic Encoding of the Critical Lure. Perceptual and Motor Skills 99:3_suppl, pages 1123-1135.
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Jerwen Jou, Yolanda E. Matus, James W. Aldridge, Dawn M. Rogers & Ryan L. Zimmerman. (2004) How similar is false recognition to veridical recognition objectively and subjectively?. Memory & Cognition 32:5, pages 824-840.
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Richard R. Reich, Mark S. Goldman & Jane A. Noll. (2004) Using the False Memory Paradigm to Test Two Key Elements of Alcohol Expectancy Theory.. Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology 12:2, pages 102-110.
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Michael D. Dodd & Colin M. Macleod. (2004) False recognition without intentional learning. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 11:1, pages 137-142.
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AKIRA MUKAI. (2004) FALSE RECALL FOR PEOPLE'S NAMES IN THE DEESE-ROEDIGER-McDERMOTT PARADIGM: CONSPICUOUSNESS AND SEMANTIC ENCODING OF THE CRITICAL LURE. Perceptual and Motor Skills 99:7, pages 1123.
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