Confabulation

In psychology, confabulation is a memory error defined as the production of fabricated, distorted, or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world. People who confabulate present incorrect memories ranging from "subtle alterations to bizarre fabrications",[1] and are generally very confident about their recollections, despite contradictory evidence.[2]

Description

Confabulation is distinguished from lying as there is no intent to deceive and the person is unaware the information is false.[3] Although individuals can present blatantly false information, confabulation can also seem to be coherent, internally consistent, and relatively normal.[3]

Most known cases of confabulation are symptomatic of brain damage or dementias, such as aneurysm, Alzheimer's disease, or Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome (a common manifestation of thiamine deficiency caused by alcoholism).[4] Additionally confabulation often occurs in people who are suffering from anticholinergic toxidrome when interrogated about bizarre or irrational behaviour.

Confabulated memories of all types most often occur in autobiographical memory and are indicative of a complicated and intricate process that can be led astray at any point during encoding, storage, or recall of a memory.[2] This type of confabulation is commonly seen in Korsakoff's syndrome.[5]

Distinctions

Two types of confabulation are often distinguished:

  • Provoked (momentary, or secondary) confabulations represent a normal response to a faulty memory, are common in both amnesia and dementia,[6] and can become apparent during memory tests.[7]
  • Spontaneous (or primary) confabulations do not occur in response to a cue[7] and seem to be involuntary.[8] They are relatively rare, more common in cases of dementia, and may result from the interaction between frontal lobe pathology and organic amnesia.[6]

Another distinction is that between:[8]

  • Verbal confabulations- spoken false memories, most common type
  • Behavioral confabulations- occur when an individual acts on their false memories

Signs and symptoms

Confabulation is associated with several characteristics:

  1. Typically verbal statements but can also be non-verbal gestures or actions.
  2. Can include autobiographical and non-personal information, such as historical facts, fairy-tales, or other aspects of semantic memory.
  3. The account can be fantastic or coherent.
  4. Both the premise and the details of the account can be false.
  5. The account is usually drawn from the patient's memory of actual experiences, including past and current thoughts.
  6. The patient is unaware of the accounts' distortions or inappropriateness, and is not concerned when errors are pointed out.
  7. There is no hidden motivation behind the account.
  8. The patient's personality structure may play a role in his/her readiness to confabulate.[3]

Theories

Theories of confabulation range in emphasis. Some theories propose that confabulations represent a way for memory-disabled people to maintain their self-identity.[7] Other theories use neurocognitive links to explain the process of confabulation.[9] Still other theories frame confabulation around the more familiar concept of delusion.[10] Other researchers frame confabulation within the fuzzy-trace theory.[11] Finally, some researchers call for theories that rely less on neurocognitive explanations and more on epistemic accounts.[12]

Neuropsychological theories

The most popular theories of confabulation come from the field of neuropsychology or cognitive neuroscience.[9] Research suggests that confabulation is associated with dysfunction of cognitive processes that control the retrieval from long-term memory. Frontal lobe damage often disrupts this process, preventing the retrieval of information and the evaluation of its output.[13][14] Furthermore, researchers argue that confabulation is a disorder resulting from failed "reality monitoring/source monitoring" (i.e. deciding whether a memory is based on an actual event or whether it is imagined).[15] Some neuropsychologists suggest that errors in retrieval of information from long-term memory that are made by normal subjects involve different components of control processes than errors made by confabulators.[16] Kraepelin distinguished two subtypes of confabulation, one of which he called simple confabulation, caused partly by errors in the temporal ordering of real events. The other variety he called fantastic confabulation, which was bizarre and patently impossible statements not rooted in true memory. Simple confabulation may result from damage to memory systems in the medial temporal lobe. Fantastic confabulations reveal a dysfunction of the Supervisory System,[17] which is believed to be a function of the frontal cortex.

Self-identity theory

Some argue confabulations have a self-serving, emotional component in those with memory deficits that aids to maintain a coherent self-concept.[7] In other words, people who confabulate are motivated to do so, because they have gaps in their memory that they want to fill in and cover up.

Temporality theory

Support for the temporality account suggests that confabulations occur when an individual is unable to place events properly in time.[7] Thus, an individual might correctly state an action he/she performed, but say he/she did it yesterday, when he/she did it weeks ago. In the Memory, Consciousness, and Temporality Theory, confabulation occurs because of a deficit in temporal consciousness or awareness.[18]

Monitoring theory

Along a similar notion are the theories of reality and source monitoring theories.[8] In these theories, confabulation occurs when individuals incorrectly attribute memories as reality, or incorrectly attribute memories to a certain source. Thus, an individual might claim an imagined event happened in reality, or that a friend told him/her about an event he/she actually heard about on television.

Strategic retrieval account theory

Supporters of the strategic retrieval account suggest that confabulations occur when an individual cannot actively monitor a memory for truthfulness after its retrieval.[8] An individual recalls a memory, but there is some deficit after recall that interferes with the person establishing its falseness.

Executive control theory

Still others propose that all types of false memories, including confabulation, fit into a general memory and executive function model.[19] In 2007, a framework for confabulation was proposed that stated confabulation is the result of two things: Problems with executive control and problems with evaluation. In the executive control deficit, the incorrect memory is retrieved from the brain. In the evaluative deficit, the memory will be accepted as a truth due to an inability to distinguish a belief from an actual memory.[7]

In the context of delusion theories

Recent models of confabulation have attempted to build upon the link between delusion and confabulation.[10] More recently, a monitoring account for delusion, applied to confabulation, proposed both the inclusion of conscious and unconscious processing. The claim was that by encompassing the notion of both processes, spontaneous versus provoked confabulations could be better explained. In other words, there are two ways to confabulate. One is the unconscious, spontaneous way in which a memory goes through no logical, explanatory processing. The other is the conscious, provoked way in which a memory is recalled intentionally by the individual to explain something confusing or unusual.[20]

Fuzzy-trace theory

Fuzzy-trace theory, or FTT, is a concept more commonly applied to the explanation of judgement decisions.[11] According to this theory, memories are encoded generally (gist), as well as specifically (verbatim). Thus, a confabulation could result from recalling the incorrect verbatim memory or from being able to recall the gist portion, but not the verbatim portion, of a memory.

FTT uses a set of five principles to explain false-memory phenomena. Principle 1 suggests that subjects store verbatim information and gist information parallel to one another. Both forms of storage involve the surface content of an experience. Principle 2 shares factors of retrieval of gist and verbatim traces. Principle 3 is based on dual-opponent processes in false memory. Generally, gist retrieval supports false memory, while verbatim retrieval suppresses it. Developmental variability is the topic of Principle 4. As a child develops into an adult, there is obvious improvement in the acquisition, retention, and retrieval of both verbatim and gist memory. However, during late adulthood, there will be a decline in these abilities. Finally, Principle 5 explains that verbatim and gist processing cause vivid remembering. Fuzzy-trace Theory, governed by these 5 principles, has proved useful in explaining false memory and generating new predictions about it.[21]

Epistemic theory

However, not all accounts are so embedded in the neurocognitive aspects of confabulation. Some attribute confabulation to epistemic accounts.[12] In 2009, theories underlying the causation and mechanisms for confabulation were criticized for their focus on neural processes, which are somewhat unclear, as well as their emphasis on the negativity of false remembering. Researchers proposed that an epistemic account of confabulation would be more encompassing of both the advantages and disadvantages of the process.

Presentation

Associated neurological and psychological conditions

Confabulations are often symptoms of various syndromes and psychopathologies in the adult population including: Korsakoff's syndrome, Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, and traumatic brain injury.

Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome is a neurological disorder typically characterized by years of chronic alcohol abuse and a nutritional thiamine deficiency.[22] Confabulation is one salient symptom of this syndrome.[23][24] A study on confabulation in Korsakoff's patients found that they are subject to provoked confabulation when prompted with questions pertaining to episodic memory, not semantic memory, and when prompted with questions where the appropriate response would be "I don’t know."[25] This suggests that confabulation in these patients is "domain-specific." Korsakoff's patients who confabulate are more likely than healthy adults to falsely recognize distractor words, suggesting that false recognition is a "confabulatory behavior."

Alzheimer's disease is a condition with both neurological and psychological components. It is a form of dementia associated with severe frontal lobe dysfunction. Confabulation in individuals with Alzheimer's is often more spontaneous than it is in other conditions, especially in the advanced stages of the disease. Alzheimer's patients demonstrate comparable abilities to encode information as healthy elderly adults, suggesting that impairments in encoding are not associated with confabulation.[26] However, as seen in Korsakoff's patients, confabulation in Alzheimer's patients is higher when prompted with questions investigating episodic memory. Researchers suggest this is due to damage in the posterior cortical regions of the brain, which is a symptom characteristic of Alzheimer's Disease.

Schizophrenia is a psychological disorder in which confabulation is sometimes observed. Although confabulation is usually coherent in its presentation, confabulations of schizophrenic patients are often delusional[27] Researchers have noted that these patients tend to make up delusions on the spot which are often fantastic and become increasingly elaborate with questioning.[28] Unlike patients with Korsakoff's and Alzheimer's, patients with schizophrenia are more likely to confabulate when prompted with questions regarding their semantic memories, as opposed to episodic memory prompting.[29] In addition, confabulation does not appear to be related to any memory deficit in schizophrenic patients. This is contrary to most forms of confabulation. Also, confabulations made by schizophrenic patients often do not involve the creation of new information, but instead involve an attempt by the patient to reconstruct actual details of a past event.

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can also result in confabulation. Research has shown that patients with damage to the inferior medial frontal lobe confabulate significantly more than patients with damage to the posterior area and healthy controls.[30] This suggests that this region is key in producing confabulatory responses, and that memory deficit is important but not necessary in confabulation. Additionally, research suggests that confabulation can be seen in patients with frontal lobe syndrome, which involves an insult to the frontal lobe as a result of disease or traumatic brain injury (TBI).[31][32][33] Finally, rupture of the anterior or posterior communicating artery, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and encephalitis are also possible causes of confabulation.[13][34]

Location of brain lesions

Confabulation is believed to be a result of damage to the right frontal lobe of the brain.[3] In particular, damage can be localized to the ventromedial frontal lobes and other structures fed by the anterior communicating artery (ACoA), including the basal forebrain, septum, fornix, cingulate gyrus, cingulum, anterior hypothalamus, and head of the caudate nucleus.[35][36]

Developmental differences

While some recent literature has suggested that older adults may be more susceptible than their younger counterparts to have false memories, the majority of research on forced confabulation centers around children.[37] Children are particularly susceptible to forced confabulations based on their high suggestibility.[38][39] When forced to recall confabulated events, children are less likely to remember that they had previously confabulated these situations, and they are more likely than their adult counterparts to come to remember these confabulations as real events that transpired.[40] Research suggests that this inability to distinguish between past confabulatory and real events is centered on developmental differences in source monitoring. Due to underdeveloped encoding and critical reasoning skills, children's ability to distinguish real memories from false memories may be impaired. It may also be that younger children lack the meta-memory processes required to remember confabulated versus non-confabulated events.[41] Children's meta-memory processes may also be influenced by expectancies or biases, in that they believe that highly plausible false scenarios are not confabulated.[42] However, when knowingly being tested for accuracy, children are more likely to respond, "I don’t know" at a rate comparable to adults for unanswerable questions than they are to confabulate.[43][44] Ultimately, misinformation effects can be minimized by tailoring individual interviews to the specific developmental stage, often based on age, of the participant.[45]

Provoked versus spontaneous confabulations

There is evidence to support different cognitive mechanisms for provoked and spontaneous confabulation.[46] One study suggested that spontaneous confabulation may be a result of an amnesic patient's inability to distinguish the chronological order of events in their memory. In contrast, provoked confabulation may be a compensatory mechanism, in which the patient tries to make up for their memory deficiency by attempting to demonstrate competency in recollection.

Confidence in false memories

Confabulation of events or situations may lead to an eventual acceptance of the confabulated information as true.[47] For instance, people who knowingly lie about a situation may eventually come to believe that their lies are truthful with time.[48] In an interview setting, people are more likely to confabulate in situations in which they are presented false information by another person, as opposed to when they self-generate these falsehoods.[49] Further, people are more likely to accept false information as true when they are interviewed at a later time (after the event in question) than those who are interviewed immediately or soon after the event.[50] Affirmative feedback for confabulated responses is also shown to increase the confabulator's confidence in their response.[51] For instance, in culprit identification, if a witness falsely identifies a member of a line-up, he will be more confident in his identification if the interviewer provides affirmative feedback. This effect of confirmatory feedback appears to last over time, as witnesses will even remember the confabulated information months later.[52]

Among normal subjects

On rare occasions, confabulation can also be seen in normal subjects.[16] It is currently unclear how completely healthy individuals produce confabulations. It is possible that these individuals are in the process of developing some type of organic condition that is causing their confabulation symptoms. It is not uncommon, however, for the general population to display some very mild symptoms of provoked confabulations. Subtle distortions and intrusions in memory are commonly produced by normal subjects when they remember something poorly.

Diagnosis and treatment

Spontaneous confabulations, due to their involuntary nature, cannot be manipulated in a laboratory setting.[8] However, provoked confabulations can be researched in various theoretical contexts. The mechanisms found to underlie provoked confabulations can be applied to spontaneous confabulation mechanisms. The basic premise of researching confabulation comprises finding errors and distortions in memory tests of an individual.

Deese–Roediger–McDermott lists

Confabulations can be detected in the context of the Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm by using the Deese–Roediger–McDermott lists.[53] Participants listen to audio recordings of several lists of words centered around a theme, known as the critical word. The participants are later asked to recall the words on their list. If the participant recalls the critical word, which was never explicitly stated in the list, it is considered a confabulation. Participants often have a false memory for the critical word.

Recognition tasks

Confabulations can also be researched by using continuous recognition tasks.[8] These tasks are often used in conjunction with confidence ratings. Generally, in a recognition task, participants are rapidly presented with pictures. Some of these pictures are shown once; others are shown multiple times. Participants press a key if they have seen the picture previously. Following a period of time, participants repeat the task. More errors on the second task, versus the first, are indicative of confusion, representing false memories.

Free recall tasks

Confabulations can also be detected using a free recall task, such as a self-narrative task.[8] Participants are asked to recall stories (semantic or autobiographical) that are highly familiar to them. The stories recalled are encoded for errors that could be classified as distortions in memory. Distortions could include falsifying true story elements or including details from a completely different story. Errors such as these would be indicative of confabulations.

Treatment

Treatment for confabulation is somewhat dependent on the cause or source, if identifiable. For example, treatment of Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome involves large doses of vitamin B in order to reverse the thiamine deficiency.[54] If there is no known physiological cause, more general cognitive techniques may be used to treat confabulation. A case study published in 2000 showed that Self-Monitoring Training (SMT)[55] reduced delusional confabulations. Furthermore, improvements were maintained at a three-month follow-up and were found to generalize to everyday settings. Although this treatment seems promising, more rigorous research is necessary to determine the efficacy of SMT in the general confabulation population.

Research

Although significant gains have been made in the understanding of confabulation in recent years, there is still much to be learned. One group of researchers in particular has laid out several important questions for future study. They suggest more information is needed regarding the neural systems that support the different cognitive processes necessary for normal source monitoring. They also proposed the idea of developing a standard neuro-psychological test battery able to discriminate between the different types of confabulations. And there is a considerable amount of debate regarding the best approach to organizing and combining neuro-imaging, pharmacological, and cognitive/behavioral approaches to understand confabulation.[56]

In a recent review article, another group of researchers contemplate issues concerning the distinctions between delusions and confabulation. They question whether delusions and confabulation should be considered distinct or overlapping disorders and, if overlapping, to what degree? They also discuss the role of unconscious processes in confabulation. Some researchers suggest that unconscious emotional and motivational processes are potentially just as important as cognitive and memory problems. Finally, they raise the question of where to draw the line between the pathological and the nonpathological. Delusion-like beliefs and confabulation-like fabrications are commonly seen in healthy individuals. What are the important differences between patients with similar etiology who do and do not confabulate? Since the line between pathological and nonpathological is likely blurry, should we take a more dimensional approach to confabulation? Research suggests that confabulation occurs along a continuum of implausibility, bizarreness, content, conviction, preoccupation, and distress, and impact on daily life.[57]

gollark: using remotely unusual browser = EVIL BOT
gollark: And it exploded?
gollark: I suggest we ban Twitter from using Twitter.
gollark: smh buying clothesjust program your own clothes
gollark: That on its own doesn't say if it's expensive. What does 100 robux *get* you?

See also

References

  1. "Truth about Confabulation". Archived from the original on 2013-01-03. Retrieved 2013-03-23.
  2. Nalbantian, edited by Suzanne; Matthews, Paul M.; McClelland, James L. (2010). The memory process : neuroscientific and humanistic perspectives. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-01457-1.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  3. Moscovitch M. 1995. "Confabulation". In (Eds. Schacter D.L., Coyle J.T., Fischbach G.D., Mesulum M.M. & Sullivan L.G.), Memory Distortion. pp. 226–51. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  4. Sivolap IuP Damulin IV (2013). "[Wernicke encephalopathy and Korsakoff's psychosis: clinical-pathophysiological correlation, diagnostics and treatment]". Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova. 113 (6 Pt 2): 20–26. PMID 23887463.
  5. Kopelman, M. D.; Thomson, A. D.; Guerrini, I; Marshall, E. J. (2009). "The Korsakoff Syndrome: Clinical Aspects, Psychology and Treatment". Alcohol and Alcoholism. 44 (2): 148–54. doi:10.1093/alcalc/agn118. PMID 19151162.
  6. Kopelman, M. D. (1987). "Two types of confabulation". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. 50 (11): 1482–87. doi:10.1136/jnnp.50.11.1482. PMC 1032561. PMID 3694207.
  7. Metcalf, Kasey; Langdon, Robyn; Coltheart, Max (1 February 2007). "Models of confabulation: A critical review and a new framework". Cognitive Neuropsychology. 24 (1): 23–47. doi:10.1080/02643290600694901. PMID 18416482.
  8. Gilboa, A. (13 April 2006). "Mechanisms of spontaneous confabulations: a strategic retrieval account". Brain. 129 (6): 1399–1414. doi:10.1093/brain/awl093. PMID 16638795.
  9. Glowinski, Remy; Payman, Vahid; Frencham, Kate (2008). "Confabulation: a spontaneous and fantastic review". Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. 42 (11): 932–40. doi:10.1080/00048670802415335. PMID 18941957.
  10. Kopelman, Michael D. (2010). "Varieties of confabulation and delusion". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 15 (1–3): 14–37. doi:10.1080/13546800902732830. PMID 19753493.
  11. Brainerd, C.J.; Reyna, V.F. (1 November 1998). "Fuzzy-Trace Theory and Children's False Memories". Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 71 (2): 81–129. doi:10.1006/jecp.1998.2464. PMID 9843617. S2CID 12290995.
  12. Bortolotti, Lisa; Cox, Rochelle E. (1 December 2009). "'Faultless' ignorance: Strengths and limitations of epistemic definitions of confabulation". Consciousness and Cognition. 18 (4): 952–65. doi:10.1016/j.concog.2009.08.011. PMID 19773185.
  13. Baddeley, Alan; Wilson, Barbara (1986). "Amnesia, autobiographical memory, and confabulation". In Rubin, David C. (ed.). Autobiographical Memory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 225–52. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511558313.020. ISBN 9780511558313.
  14. Moscovitch M.; Melo B. (1997). "Strategic retrieval and the frontal lobes: evidence from confabulation and amnesia". Neuropsychologia. 35 (7): 1017–34. doi:10.1016/s0028-3932(97)00028-6. PMID 9226662.
  15. Johnson, M.K. (1991). Reality monitoring: Evidence from confabulation in organic brain disease patients. In G.P. Prigatano & D.L. Schacter (Eds.), Awareness of deficit after brain injury. pp. 176–97. New York: Oxford.
  16. Burgess, P. W.; Shallice, T (1996). "Confabulation and the control of recollection". Memory. 4 (4): 359–411. doi:10.1080/096582196388906. PMID 8817460.
  17. Norman, D.A., & Shallice, T. (1980). Attention to action. Willed and automatic control of behavior. University of California San Diego CHIP Report 99. Later published as: Norman, Donald A.; Shallice, Tim (1986). "Attention to Action: Willed and Automatic Control of Behavior". Consciousness and Self-Regulation. pp. 1–18. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-0629-1_1. ISBN 978-1-4757-0631-4.
  18. Dalla Barba, Gianfranco; Boissé, Marie-Françoise (2010). "Temporal consciousness and confabulation: Is the medial temporal lobe "temporal"?". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 15 (1–3): 95–117. doi:10.1080/13546800902758017. PMID 19750399.
  19. Kopelman, Michael D. (1 May 1999). "Varieties of False Memory". Cognitive Neuropsychology. 16 (3–5): 197–214. doi:10.1080/026432999380762.
  20. Turner, Martha; Coltheart, Max (2010). "Confabulation and delusion: A common monitoring framework". Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. 15 (1–3): 346–76. doi:10.1080/13546800903441902. PMID 20043250.
  21. Brainerd, C. J., & Reyna, V. F. (2002). Fuzzy-Trace Theory and False Memory. Current Directions In Psychological Science (Wiley–Blackwell), 11(5), 164–69.
  22. Homewood, J; Bond, N. W. (1999). "Thiamin deficiency and Korsakoff's syndrome: Failure to find memory impairments following nonalcoholic Wernicke's encephalopathy". Alcohol. 19 (1): 75–84. doi:10.1016/s0741-8329(99)00027-0. PMID 10487391.
  23. Dalla Barba G.; Cipolotti L.; Denes G. (1990). "Autobiographical memory loss and confabulation in Korsakoff's syndrome: A case report". Cortex. 26 (4): 525–34. doi:10.1016/s0010-9452(13)80302-4. PMID 2081390.
  24. Kessels RP, Kortrijk HE, Wester AJ, Nys GM. Confabulation behavior and false memories in Korsakoff's syndrome: role of source memory and executive functioning. Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2008 Apr; 62(2) 220–25.
  25. Damme, Ilse; d'Ydewalle, Géry (2010). "Confabulation versus experimentally induced false memories in Korsakoff patients". Journal of Neuropsychology. 4 (2): 211–30. doi:10.1348/174866409X478231. PMID 19930792.
  26. Cooper, Janine M.; Shanks, Michael F.; Venneri, Annalena (11 May 2006). "Provoked confabulations in Alzheimer's disease". Neuropsychologia. 44 (10): 1697–1707. doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.03.029. PMID 16697019.
  27. Wing, J. K., Cooper, J. E., Sartorius, N. 1974. The description and classification of psychiatric symptoms: An instruction manual for the PSE and catego system. London: Cambridge University Press.
  28. Lorente-Rovira, E; Pomarol-Clotet, E; McCarthy, R. A.; Berrios, G. E.; McKenna, P. J. (2007). "Confabulation in schizophrenia and its relationship to clinical and neuropsychological features of the disorder". Psychological Medicine. 37 (10): 1403–12. doi:10.1017/S0033291707000566. PMID 17506924.
  29. Lorente-Rovira, E; Santos-Gómez, J. L.; Moro, M; Villagrán, J. M.; McKenna, P. J. (1 November 2010). "Confabulation in schizophrenia: A neuropsychological study". Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. 16 (6): 1018–26. doi:10.1017/S1355617710000718. hdl:10234/88477. PMID 20630120.
  30. Turner, Martha S.; Cipolotti, Lisa; Yousry, Tarek A.; Shallice, Tim (1 June 2008). "Confabulation: Damage to a specific inferior medial prefrontal system". Cortex. 44 (6): 637–48. doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2007.01.002. PMID 18472034.
  31. Baddeley, A; Wilson, B (1988). "Frontal amnesia and the dysexecutive syndrome". Brain and Cognition. 7 (2): 212–30. doi:10.1016/0278-2626(88)90031-0. PMID 3377900.
  32. Papagno, C; Baddeley, A (1997). "Confabulation in a dysexecutive patient: Implications for models of retrieval". Cortex. 33 (4): 743–52. doi:10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70731-7. PMID 9444475.
  33. Baddeley, Alan (1996). "Exploring the Central Executive". Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 49A (1): 5–28. doi:10.1080/713755608.
  34. Dalla Barba G (1993). "Confabulation: knowledge and recollective experience". Cognitive Neuropsychology. 10 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1080/02643299308253454.
  35. Alexander, M. P.; Freedman, M (1984). "Amnesia after anterior communicating artery aneurysm rupture". Neurology. 34 (6): 752–57. doi:10.1212/wnl.34.6.752. PMID 6539437.
  36. Irle, E; Wowra, B; Kunert, H. J.; Hampl, J; Kunze, S (1992). "Memory disturbances following anterior communicating artery rupture". Annals of Neurology. 31 (5): 473–80. doi:10.1002/ana.410310503. PMID 1596082.
  37. Brainerd, C. J.; Reyna, V. F.; Ceci, S. J. (2008). "Developmental reversals in false memory: A review of data and theory". Psychological Bulletin. 134 (3): 343–82. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.134.3.343. PMID 18444700.
  38. Shapiro, Lauren R.; Purdy, Telisa L. (2005). "Suggestibility and source monitoring errors: blame the interview style, interviewer consistency, and the child's personality". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 19 (4): 489–506. doi:10.1002/acp.1093.
  39. Shapiro, Lauren R.; Blackford, Cheryl; Chen, Chiung-Fen (2005). "Eyewitness memory for a simulated misdemeanor crime: the role of age and temperament in suggestibility". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 19 (3): 267–89. doi:10.1002/acp.1089.
  40. Ackil, Jennifer K.; Zaragoza, Maria S. (1 November 1998). "Memorial consequences of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories". Developmental Psychology. 34 (6): 1358–72. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.34.6.1358. PMID 9823517.
  41. Ghetti, Simona; Castelli, Paola; Lyons, Kristen E. (2010). "Knowing about not remembering: developmental dissociations in lack-of-memory monitoring". Developmental Science. 13 (4): 611–21. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2009.00908.x. PMID 20590725.
  42. Ghetti, Simona; Alexander, Kristen Weede (2004). ""If It Happened, I Would Remember It": Strategic Use of Event Memorability in the Rejection of False Autobiographical Events". Child Development. 75 (2): 542–61. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2004.00692.x. PMID 15056205.
  43. Roebers, Claudia; Fernandez, Olivia (2002). "The Effects of Accuracy Motivation on Children's and Adults' Event Recall, Suggestibility, and Their Answers to Unanswerable Questions". Journal of Cognition and Development. 3 (4): 415–43. doi:10.1207/S15327647JCD3,4-03.
  44. Scoboria, Alan; Mazzoni, Giuliana; Kirsch, Irving (2008). ""Don't know" responding to answerable and unanswerable questions during misleading and hypnotic interviews". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 14 (3): 255–65. doi:10.1037/1076-898X.14.3.255. PMID 18808279.
  45. Holliday, Robyn E.; Albon, Amanda J. (2004). "Minimising misinformation effects in young children with cognitive interview mnemonics". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 18 (3): 263–81. doi:10.1002/acp.973.
  46. Schnider, Armin; von Däniken, Christine; Gutbrod, Klemens (19 February 1996). "The mechanisms of spontaneous and provoked confabulations". Brain. 119 (4): 1365–75. doi:10.1093/brain/119.4.1365. PMID 8813298.
  47. Pickel, Kerri (2004). "When a lie becomes the truth: The effects of self-generated misinformation on eyewitness memory". Memory. 12 (1): 14–26. doi:10.1080/09658210244000072. PMID 15098618.
  48. Polage, Danielle C. (2004). "Fabrication deflation? The mixed effects of lying on memory". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 18 (4): 455–65. doi:10.1002/acp.995.
  49. Pezdek, Kathy; Lam, Shirley T.; Sperry, Kathryn (2009). "Forced confabulation more strongly influences event memory if suggestions are other-generated than self-generated". Legal and Criminological Psychology. 14 (2): 241–52. doi:10.1348/135532508X344773.
  50. Melnyk, Laura; Bruck, Maggie (2004). "Timing moderates the effects of repeated suggestive interviewing on children's eyewitness memory". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 18 (5): 613–31. doi:10.1002/acp.1013.
  51. Hafstad, Gertrud Sofie; Memon, Amina; Logie, Robert (2004). "Post-identification feedback, confidence and recollections of witnessing conditions in child witnesses". Applied Cognitive Psychology. 18 (7): 901–12. doi:10.1002/acp.1037.
  52. Zaragoza, M. S.; Payment, K. E.; Ackil, J. K.; Drivdahl, S. B.; Beck, M. (2001). "Interviewing Witnesses: Forced Confabulation and Confirmatory Feedback Increase False Memories". Psychological Science. 12 (6): 473–77. doi:10.1111/1467-9280.00388. PMID 11760134.
  53. Howe, Mark L.; Cicchetti, Dante; Toth, Sheree L.; Cerrito, Beth M. (1 September 2004). "True and False Memories in Maltreated Children". Child Development. 75 (5): 1402–17. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2004.00748.x. PMID 15369522.
  54. Spiegel, D. R.; Lim, K. J. (2011). "A Case of Probable Korsakoff's Syndrome: A Syndrome of Frontal Lobe and Diencephalic Structural Pathogenesis and a Comparison with Medial Temporal Lobe Dementias". Innovations in Clinical Neuroscience. 8 (6): 15–19. PMC 3140893. PMID 21779537.
  55. Dayus, B.; Van Den Broek, M.D. (2000). "Treatment of stable delusional confabulations using self-monitoring training". Neuropsychological Rehabilitation. 10 (4): 415–27. doi:10.1080/096020100411998.
  56. Johnson, M; Raye, C. L. (1998). "False memories and confabulation". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 2 (4): 137–45. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(98)01152-8. PMID 21227110.
  57. Langdon, R.; Turner, M (2010), "Delusion and confabulation: Overlapping or distinct distortions in reality?", Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 15 (1): 1–13, doi:10.1080/13546800903519095, PMID 20043251

Further reading

Classification
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.