Invitation to Psychology

(Barry) #1

274 ChaPteR 8 Memory


teacher, or spilling punch all over the mother of
the bride at a wedding (Hyman & Pentland, 1996;
Lindsay et al., 2004; Loftus & Pickrell, 1995;
Mazzoni et al., 1999). When people were shown a
phony Disneyland ad featuring Bugs Bunny, about
16 percent later recalled having met a Bugs char-
acter at Disneyland (Braun, Ellis, & Loftus, 2002).
Some people even claimed to remember shaking
hands with the character, hugging him, or seeing
him in a parade. But these memories were impos-
sible, because Bugs Bunny is a Warner Brothers
creation and would definitely be rabbit non grata
at Disneyland!
Watch the Video Thinking Like a Psychologist:
Police Line-Up at MyPsychLab

Children’s Testimony LO 8.4
The power of suggestion can affect anyone, but
its impact on children who are being questioned
regarding possible sexual or physical abuse is es-
pecially worrisome.
How can adults find
out whether a young
child has been sexu-
ally molested without
influencing or taint-
ing what the child
says? The answer is
crucial. Throughout
the 1980s and 1990s, accusations of child abuse
in daycare centers across the United States sky-
rocketed. After being interviewed by therapists

and police investigators, children were claiming
that their teachers had molested them in the most
terrible ways: hanging them in trees, raping them,
and even forcing them to eat feces. Although in no
case had parents actually seen the daycare teach-
ers treating the children badly, although none
of the children had complained to their parents,
and although none of the parents had noticed
any symptoms or problems in their children, the
accused teachers were often sentenced to many
years in prison.
Thanks largely to research by psychologi-
cal scientists, the hysteria eventually subsided
and people were able to assess more clearly
what had gone wrong in the way children had
been interviewed in these cases: The interview-
ers had influenced the children by bombarding
them with leading questions, suggestions, and
other forms of pressure to say that something
happened when it did not (Ceci & Bruck, 1995).
In the courtroom, too, the style of questions
put to children under cross-examination often
leads them to be highly inaccurate (O’Neill &
Zajac, 2012). The question to ask, therefore, is
not “Can children’s memories be trusted?” but
“Under what conditions are children apt to be
suggestible and to report that something hap-
pened to them when in fact it did not?”
The answer, from many experimental stud-
ies, is that a child is more likely to give a false
report when the interviewer strongly believes
that the child has been molested and then uses
suggestive techniques to get the child to reveal

FiguRE 8.1 The influence of Misleading information
In a study described in the text, students saw the face of a young man with straight hair and then had to reconstruct
it from memory. On the left is one student’s reconstruction in the absence of misleading information about the man’s
hair. On the right is another person’s reconstruction of the same face after exposure to misleading information that
mentioned curly hair (Loftus & Greene, 1980).

Children’s Testimony


Testimony

Thinking
CriTiCally
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