Artigo Revisado por pares

What people believe about memory

2006; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 14; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/09658210600646716

ISSN

1464-0686

Autores

Svein Magnussen, Jan Andersson, Cesare Cornoldi, Rossana De Béni, Tor Endestad, Gail S. Goodman, Tore Helstrup, Asher Koriat, Maria Larsson, Annika Melinder, Lars‐Göran Nilsson, Jerker Rönnberg, Hubert D. Zimmer,

Tópico(s)

Identity, Memory, and Therapy

Resumo

Two representative samples of adult Norwegians (n=2000) were asked a set of general and specific questions regarding their beliefs and opinions about human memory. The results indicate that on many questions, such as time of the earliest memories, inhibiting effects of collaboration, and memory for dramatic versus ordinary events, the views of the general public concurred with current research findings, and people in general had realistic views about their own memory performance. On other questions, such as the reliability of olfactory as compared with visual and auditory memory, the memory of small children in comparison with that of adults, the likelihood of repression of adult traumatic memories, and on more general questions such as the possibility of training memory and the capacity limitations of long-term memory, a large proportion of the participants expressed views that are less supported by scientific evidence. Implications of these findings are briefly discussed.

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