Three Types Of Memory Misattribution, Source Amnesia And False Memory

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Failures in memory are common, sometimes dangerous, and oftentimes frustrating. Three types of memory failures are misattribution, source amnesia, and false memories. Memory misattribution occurs when we remember information, but attribute it to an incorrect source by mistake (Gluck, Mercado, Myers, 2014), for example: believing you remember seeing a movie, when in actuality someone told you about the movie in detail. Another form of memory misattribution is cryptomnesia: an individual believes a concept is novel and their own, when they have forgotten they actually learned it elsewhere (Gluck, Mercado, Myers, 2014). Cryptomnesia may lead to unintentional plagiarism or copyright infringement. Separate but related to misattribution is the phenomenon of source amnesia: remembering information but being unable to remember where or how the information was obtained (Gluck, Mercado, Myers, 2014); for example, remembering information from a conversation you had but being unable to remember who it was with or when it occurred. Misattribution and source amnesia arise from a distortion in declarative memory: the semantic …show more content…

The phenomenon of false memories has prompted much research and debate over the years, particularly because of the implications they have had within the legal system. Before discussing the implications and impacts false memories may have, it is important to review what is known regarding the factors at work in creating false memories. Simply put, “false memories tend to occur when people are prompted to imagine missing details” (Gluck, Mercado, Myers, 2014). An individual may go on to remember the imagined details of a fragmented memory as true (which is a kind of memory misattribution), and if they continue to rehearse, imagine, or review the flawed concept in their mind, the more likely it is to be encoded in their memory as true (Gluck, Mercado, Myers,

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