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#falsememory — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #falsememory, aggregated by home.social.

  1. 📰 | „Regression“: Psychothriller um die Themen Falscherinnerungen und Satanic Panic bei Youtube

    "Satanic Panic" und Falscherinnerungen in einen Psychothriller mit Starbesetzung verpackt:

    Wem dieses Werk bisher ein blinder Fleck in der persönlichen Filmlandschaft war, der hat nun die Möglichkeit, den Film werbefinanziert auf #YouTube nachzuholen.

    Bernd Harder im #SkeptixBlog.

    skeptix.org/2026/01/28/regress

    #SatanicPanic #FalseMemory

  2. 📰 | „Regression“: Psychothriller um die Themen Falscherinnerungen und Satanic Panic bei Youtube

    "Satanic Panic" und Falscherinnerungen in einen Psychothriller mit Starbesetzung verpackt:

    Wem dieses Werk bisher ein blinder Fleck in der persönlichen Filmlandschaft war, der hat nun die Möglichkeit, den Film werbefinanziert auf #YouTube nachzuholen.

    Bernd Harder im #SkeptixBlog.

    skeptix.org/2026/01/28/regress

    #SatanicPanic #FalseMemory

  3. 📰 | „Regression“: Psychothriller um die Themen Falscherinnerungen und Satanic Panic bei Youtube

    "Satanic Panic" und Falscherinnerungen in einen Psychothriller mit Starbesetzung verpackt:

    Wem dieses Werk bisher ein blinder Fleck in der persönlichen Filmlandschaft war, der hat nun die Möglichkeit, den Film werbefinanziert auf #YouTube nachzuholen.

    Bernd Harder im #SkeptixBlog.

    skeptix.org/2026/01/28/regress

    #SatanicPanic #FalseMemory

  4. 📰 | „Regression“: Psychothriller um die Themen Falscherinnerungen und Satanic Panic bei Youtube

    "Satanic Panic" und Falscherinnerungen in einen Psychothriller mit Starbesetzung verpackt:

    Wem dieses Werk bisher ein blinder Fleck in der persönlichen Filmlandschaft war, der hat nun die Möglichkeit, den Film werbefinanziert auf #YouTube nachzuholen.

    Bernd Harder im #SkeptixBlog.

    skeptix.org/2026/01/28/regress

    #SatanicPanic #FalseMemory

  5. 📰 | „Regression“: Psychothriller um die Themen Falscherinnerungen und Satanic Panic bei Youtube

    "Satanic Panic" und Falscherinnerungen in einen Psychothriller mit Starbesetzung verpackt:

    Wem dieses Werk bisher ein blinder Fleck in der persönlichen Filmlandschaft war, der hat nun die Möglichkeit, den Film werbefinanziert auf #YouTube nachzuholen.

    Bernd Harder im #SkeptixBlog.

    skeptix.org/2026/01/28/regress

    #SatanicPanic #FalseMemory

  6. 📰 | „Memory Wars“: Doku über Elizabeth Loftus und das Thema #Falscherinnerungen neu im #Kino

    Mit der Forscherin Elizabeth Loftus hat der Regisseur Hendrik Löbbert eine zentrale Figur in der Debatte um #Falscherinnerungen auf die Leinwand gebracht. Sein Film #MemoryWars kommt im September in die Kinos. Bernd hat mit Löbbert über den Film gesprochen und #Karten für die ersten Aufführungen mitgebracht, die ihr #gewinnen könnt. Mehr dazu im #SkeptixBlog!

    skeptix.org/2025/08/18/memory-

    #falsememory

  7. 📰 | „Memory Wars“: Doku über Elizabeth Loftus und das Thema #Falscherinnerungen neu im #Kino

    Mit der Forscherin Elizabeth Loftus hat der Regisseur Hendrik Löbbert eine zentrale Figur in der Debatte um #Falscherinnerungen auf die Leinwand gebracht. Sein Film #MemoryWars kommt im September in die Kinos. Bernd hat mit Löbbert über den Film gesprochen und #Karten für die ersten Aufführungen mitgebracht, die ihr #gewinnen könnt. Mehr dazu im #SkeptixBlog!

    skeptix.org/2025/08/18/memory-

    #falsememory

  8. 📰 | „Memory Wars“: Doku über Elizabeth Loftus und das Thema #Falscherinnerungen neu im #Kino

    Mit der Forscherin Elizabeth Loftus hat der Regisseur Hendrik Löbbert eine zentrale Figur in der Debatte um #Falscherinnerungen auf die Leinwand gebracht. Sein Film #MemoryWars kommt im September in die Kinos. Bernd hat mit Löbbert über den Film gesprochen und #Karten für die ersten Aufführungen mitgebracht, die ihr #gewinnen könnt. Mehr dazu im #SkeptixBlog!

    skeptix.org/2025/08/18/memory-

    #falsememory

  9. 📰 | „Memory Wars“: Doku über Elizabeth Loftus und das Thema #Falscherinnerungen neu im #Kino

    Mit der Forscherin Elizabeth Loftus hat der Regisseur Hendrik Löbbert eine zentrale Figur in der Debatte um #Falscherinnerungen auf die Leinwand gebracht. Sein Film #MemoryWars kommt im September in die Kinos. Bernd hat mit Löbbert über den Film gesprochen und #Karten für die ersten Aufführungen mitgebracht, die ihr #gewinnen könnt. Mehr dazu im #SkeptixBlog!

    skeptix.org/2025/08/18/memory-

    #falsememory

  10. 📰 | „Memory Wars“: Doku über Elizabeth Loftus und das Thema #Falscherinnerungen neu im #Kino

    Mit der Forscherin Elizabeth Loftus hat der Regisseur Hendrik Löbbert eine zentrale Figur in der Debatte um #Falscherinnerungen auf die Leinwand gebracht. Sein Film #MemoryWars kommt im September in die Kinos. Bernd hat mit Löbbert über den Film gesprochen und #Karten für die ersten Aufführungen mitgebracht, die ihr #gewinnen könnt. Mehr dazu im #SkeptixBlog!

    skeptix.org/2025/08/18/memory-

    #falsememory

  11. The brain has a tell for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests. A new study used brain scans and eye tracking to measure how people remember events that never happened. The study found that false memories are associated with lower brain activity and less eye movement than true memories. #FalseMemory #BrainScan #LiveScience livescience.com/health/neurosc

  12. [Nostalgia Nerd] explains the Mandela Effect
    youtu.be/ITotBIkCAPo
    I blame the cheapness of the C3PO action figure I was given as a child for why it is only today that I've learned only one of his legs is gold.

  13. 📰 | Falscherinnerungen – das Thema, dem Wieskerstrauch und Co. sich standhaft verweigern

    Falscherinnerungen sind ein Thema, dem sich die Satanic-Panic-Szene verweigert. Lieber dreht man Filme über angebliche „Blinde Flecken“. Bernd Harder gibt im #SkeptixBlog einen kurzen Überblick - wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.

    skeptix.org/2025/06/16/falsche

    #BlinderFleck #FalseMemory #LizWieskerstrauch #rgmc #dis #satanicpanic

  14. 📰 | Falscherinnerungen – das Thema, dem Wieskerstrauch und Co. sich standhaft verweigern

    Falscherinnerungen sind ein Thema, dem sich die Satanic-Panic-Szene verweigert. Lieber dreht man Filme über angebliche „Blinde Flecken“. Bernd Harder gibt im #SkeptixBlog einen kurzen Überblick - wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.

    skeptix.org/2025/06/16/falsche

    #BlinderFleck #FalseMemory #LizWieskerstrauch #rgmc #dis #satanicpanic

  15. 📰 | Falscherinnerungen – das Thema, dem Wieskerstrauch und Co. sich standhaft verweigern

    Falscherinnerungen sind ein Thema, dem sich die Satanic-Panic-Szene verweigert. Lieber dreht man Filme über angebliche „Blinde Flecken“. Bernd Harder gibt im #SkeptixBlog einen kurzen Überblick - wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.

    skeptix.org/2025/06/16/falsche

    #BlinderFleck #FalseMemory #LizWieskerstrauch #rgmc #dis #satanicpanic

  16. 📰 | Falscherinnerungen – das Thema, dem Wieskerstrauch und Co. sich standhaft verweigern

    Falscherinnerungen sind ein Thema, dem sich die Satanic-Panic-Szene verweigert. Lieber dreht man Filme über angebliche „Blinde Flecken“. Bernd Harder gibt im #SkeptixBlog einen kurzen Überblick - wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.

    skeptix.org/2025/06/16/falsche

    #BlinderFleck #FalseMemory #LizWieskerstrauch #rgmc #dis #satanicpanic

  17. 📰 | Falscherinnerungen – das Thema, dem Wieskerstrauch und Co. sich standhaft verweigern

    Falscherinnerungen sind ein Thema, dem sich die Satanic-Panic-Szene verweigert. Lieber dreht man Filme über angebliche „Blinde Flecken“. Bernd Harder gibt im #SkeptixBlog einen kurzen Überblick - wenn ich mich richtig erinnere.

    skeptix.org/2025/06/16/falsche

    #BlinderFleck #FalseMemory #LizWieskerstrauch #rgmc #dis #satanicpanic

  18. "[…] Although the prevalence of false memories of child abuse in child care centers was largely exaggerated, the "witch hunt narrative" continues to be kept alive by some media, academic, and textbook discussions about dissociation and child abuse. Researchers who have analyzed textbooks have consistently concluded that much of the information about child maltreat-ment, child abuse memories, and DDs is inaccurate, biased, sensationalized, and/or not empirically based (Brand et al., 2019a; Kissee et al., 2014; Wilgus et al., 2015). Undergraduate and graduate psychology textbooks typically include relatively little coverage about TRDs and DDs, and many include factually inaccurate or sensationalized information rather than evidence-based research (Brand et al., 2019a; Wilgus et al., 2015). Some authors of psychology textbooks only present research that shows that memories can be in-accurate, failing to present research that documents that delayed recollections of child abuse are as likely to be accurate as they are inaccurate (Dalenberg, 1996, 2006; Williams, 1995). In fact, many of the most prominent authors who previously challenged the accuracy of delayed recollections of abuse have recently admitted they are now "open to the possibility that some recovered memories are genuine" (Lynn et al., 2014, p. 23). Recent reviews of this debate are available (e.g., Brand et al., 2017a, 2017b, 2018; Dalenberg et al., 2012, 2014; Lynn et al., 2014; Merckelbach & Patihis, 2018).

    In a climate where many academics and textbooks tend to present sensationalized portrayals of DDs and only one side of the debate about the accuracy of child abuse memories, there is less open-minded discussion, training, and research about child abuse and its im-pact, including dissociation and DDs. One impact of this biased presentation is that people who have already been victimized in childhood and/or adulthood may suffer longer with TRD, poor quality of life, and a host of other sequelae of trauma. They are also at risk for encountering mental health and health care professionals who challenge the validity of their symptoms and DD (Nester, Hawkins & Brand, 2022). For example, 80% of Australian patients diagnosed with a DD reported they had experienced skeptical or antagonistic attitudes from clinicians about their DD diagnosis or dissociative symptoms (Leonard et al., 2005).

    Survivors of childhood abuse often experience disbelief, being blamed for the abuse, or a lack of compassion and/or protection if they have the courage to reveal the abuse. For example, 52% of women who revealed to a parent that they were being incestuously abused in childhood reported that the abuse continued for 1 year or longer after disclosure (Roesler & Wind, 1994), and many received reactions that blamed them rather than the abuser (McTavish et al., 2019; Roesler & Wind, 1994; Romano et al., 2019).

    Trauma survivors should not encounter damaging reactions when they seek assistance from the very professionals who are supposed to help them, not further compound their distress."

    -- The Finding Solid Ground Program Workbook: Overcoming Obstacles in Trauma Recovery. 2022. Oxford University Press. doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780

    #CPTSD #FalseMemory

  19. "[…] Although the prevalence of false memories of child abuse in child care centers was largely exaggerated, the "witch hunt narrative" continues to be kept alive by some media, academic, and textbook discussions about dissociation and child abuse. Researchers who have analyzed textbooks have consistently concluded that much of the information about child maltreat-ment, child abuse memories, and DDs is inaccurate, biased, sensationalized, and/or not empirically based (Brand et al., 2019a; Kissee et al., 2014; Wilgus et al., 2015). Undergraduate and graduate psychology textbooks typically include relatively little coverage about TRDs and DDs, and many include factually inaccurate or sensationalized information rather than evidence-based research (Brand et al., 2019a; Wilgus et al., 2015). Some authors of psychology textbooks only present research that shows that memories can be in-accurate, failing to present research that documents that delayed recollections of child abuse are as likely to be accurate as they are inaccurate (Dalenberg, 1996, 2006; Williams, 1995). In fact, many of the most prominent authors who previously challenged the accuracy of delayed recollections of abuse have recently admitted they are now "open to the possibility that some recovered memories are genuine" (Lynn et al., 2014, p. 23). Recent reviews of this debate are available (e.g., Brand et al., 2017a, 2017b, 2018; Dalenberg et al., 2012, 2014; Lynn et al., 2014; Merckelbach & Patihis, 2018).

    In a climate where many academics and textbooks tend to present sensationalized portrayals of DDs and only one side of the debate about the accuracy of child abuse memories, there is less open-minded discussion, training, and research about child abuse and its im-pact, including dissociation and DDs. One impact of this biased presentation is that people who have already been victimized in childhood and/or adulthood may suffer longer with TRD, poor quality of life, and a host of other sequelae of trauma. They are also at risk for encountering mental health and health care professionals who challenge the validity of their symptoms and DD (Nester, Hawkins & Brand, 2022). For example, 80% of Australian patients diagnosed with a DD reported they had experienced skeptical or antagonistic attitudes from clinicians about their DD diagnosis or dissociative symptoms (Leonard et al., 2005).

    Survivors of childhood abuse often experience disbelief, being blamed for the abuse, or a lack of compassion and/or protection if they have the courage to reveal the abuse. For example, 52% of women who revealed to a parent that they were being incestuously abused in childhood reported that the abuse continued for 1 year or longer after disclosure (Roesler & Wind, 1994), and many received reactions that blamed them rather than the abuser (McTavish et al., 2019; Roesler & Wind, 1994; Romano et al., 2019).

    Trauma survivors should not encounter damaging reactions when they seek assistance from the very professionals who are supposed to help them, not further compound their distress."

    -- The Finding Solid Ground Program Workbook: Overcoming Obstacles in Trauma Recovery. 2022. Oxford University Press. doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780

    #CPTSD #FalseMemory

  20. "[…] Although the prevalence of false memories of child abuse in child care centers was largely exaggerated, the "witch hunt narrative" continues to be kept alive by some media, academic, and textbook discussions about dissociation and child abuse. Researchers who have analyzed textbooks have consistently concluded that much of the information about child maltreat-ment, child abuse memories, and DDs is inaccurate, biased, sensationalized, and/or not empirically based (Brand et al., 2019a; Kissee et al., 2014; Wilgus et al., 2015). Undergraduate and graduate psychology textbooks typically include relatively little coverage about TRDs and DDs, and many include factually inaccurate or sensationalized information rather than evidence-based research (Brand et al., 2019a; Wilgus et al., 2015). Some authors of psychology textbooks only present research that shows that memories can be in-accurate, failing to present research that documents that delayed recollections of child abuse are as likely to be accurate as they are inaccurate (Dalenberg, 1996, 2006; Williams, 1995). In fact, many of the most prominent authors who previously challenged the accuracy of delayed recollections of abuse have recently admitted they are now "open to the possibility that some recovered memories are genuine" (Lynn et al., 2014, p. 23). Recent reviews of this debate are available (e.g., Brand et al., 2017a, 2017b, 2018; Dalenberg et al., 2012, 2014; Lynn et al., 2014; Merckelbach & Patihis, 2018).

    In a climate where many academics and textbooks tend to present sensationalized portrayals of DDs and only one side of the debate about the accuracy of child abuse memories, there is less open-minded discussion, training, and research about child abuse and its im-pact, including dissociation and DDs. One impact of this biased presentation is that people who have already been victimized in childhood and/or adulthood may suffer longer with TRD, poor quality of life, and a host of other sequelae of trauma. They are also at risk for encountering mental health and health care professionals who challenge the validity of their symptoms and DD (Nester, Hawkins & Brand, 2022). For example, 80% of Australian patients diagnosed with a DD reported they had experienced skeptical or antagonistic attitudes from clinicians about their DD diagnosis or dissociative symptoms (Leonard et al., 2005).

    Survivors of childhood abuse often experience disbelief, being blamed for the abuse, or a lack of compassion and/or protection if they have the courage to reveal the abuse. For example, 52% of women who revealed to a parent that they were being incestuously abused in childhood reported that the abuse continued for 1 year or longer after disclosure (Roesler & Wind, 1994), and many received reactions that blamed them rather than the abuser (McTavish et al., 2019; Roesler & Wind, 1994; Romano et al., 2019).

    Trauma survivors should not encounter damaging reactions when they seek assistance from the very professionals who are supposed to help them, not further compound their distress."

    -- The Finding Solid Ground Program Workbook: Overcoming Obstacles in Trauma Recovery. 2022. Oxford University Press. doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780

    #CPTSD #FalseMemory

  21. "[…] Although the prevalence of false memories of child abuse in child care centers was largely exaggerated, the "witch hunt narrative" continues to be kept alive by some media, academic, and textbook discussions about dissociation and child abuse. Researchers who have analyzed textbooks have consistently concluded that much of the information about child maltreat-ment, child abuse memories, and DDs is inaccurate, biased, sensationalized, and/or not empirically based (Brand et al., 2019a; Kissee et al., 2014; Wilgus et al., 2015). Undergraduate and graduate psychology textbooks typically include relatively little coverage about TRDs and DDs, and many include factually inaccurate or sensationalized information rather than evidence-based research (Brand et al., 2019a; Wilgus et al., 2015). Some authors of psychology textbooks only present research that shows that memories can be in-accurate, failing to present research that documents that delayed recollections of child abuse are as likely to be accurate as they are inaccurate (Dalenberg, 1996, 2006; Williams, 1995). In fact, many of the most prominent authors who previously challenged the accuracy of delayed recollections of abuse have recently admitted they are now "open to the possibility that some recovered memories are genuine" (Lynn et al., 2014, p. 23). Recent reviews of this debate are available (e.g., Brand et al., 2017a, 2017b, 2018; Dalenberg et al., 2012, 2014; Lynn et al., 2014; Merckelbach & Patihis, 2018).

    In a climate where many academics and textbooks tend to present sensationalized portrayals of DDs and only one side of the debate about the accuracy of child abuse memories, there is less open-minded discussion, training, and research about child abuse and its im-pact, including dissociation and DDs. One impact of this biased presentation is that people who have already been victimized in childhood and/or adulthood may suffer longer with TRD, poor quality of life, and a host of other sequelae of trauma. They are also at risk for encountering mental health and health care professionals who challenge the validity of their symptoms and DD (Nester, Hawkins & Brand, 2022). For example, 80% of Australian patients diagnosed with a DD reported they had experienced skeptical or antagonistic attitudes from clinicians about their DD diagnosis or dissociative symptoms (Leonard et al., 2005).

    Survivors of childhood abuse often experience disbelief, being blamed for the abuse, or a lack of compassion and/or protection if they have the courage to reveal the abuse. For example, 52% of women who revealed to a parent that they were being incestuously abused in childhood reported that the abuse continued for 1 year or longer after disclosure (Roesler & Wind, 1994), and many received reactions that blamed them rather than the abuser (McTavish et al., 2019; Roesler & Wind, 1994; Romano et al., 2019).

    Trauma survivors should not encounter damaging reactions when they seek assistance from the very professionals who are supposed to help them, not further compound their distress."

    -- The Finding Solid Ground Program Workbook: Overcoming Obstacles in Trauma Recovery. 2022. Oxford University Press. doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780

    #CPTSD #FalseMemory

  22. [Nostalgia Nerd] explains the Mandela Effect
    youtu.be/ITotBIkCAPo
    I blame the cheapness of the C3PO action figure I was given as a child for why it is only today that I've learned only one of his legs is gold.
    #StarWars #FalseMemory #LooneyTunes #MonopolyMonocle #DisneyLogo #SteamboatWillie

  23. [Nostalgia Nerd] explains the Mandela Effect
    youtu.be/ITotBIkCAPo
    I blame the cheapness of the C3PO action figure I was given as a child for why it is only today that I've learned only one of his legs is gold.
    #StarWars #FalseMemory #LooneyTunes #MonopolyMonocle #DisneyLogo #SteamboatWillie

  24. [Nostalgia Nerd] explains the Mandela Effect
    youtu.be/ITotBIkCAPo
    I blame the cheapness of the C3PO action figure I was given as a child for why it is only today that I've learned only one of his legs is gold.
    #StarWars #FalseMemory #LooneyTunes #MonopolyMonocle #DisneyLogo #SteamboatWillie

  25. [Nostalgia Nerd] explains the Mandela Effect
    youtu.be/ITotBIkCAPo
    I blame the cheapness of the C3PO action figure I was given as a child for why it is only today that I've learned only one of his legs is gold.
    #StarWars #FalseMemory #LooneyTunes #MonopolyMonocle #DisneyLogo #SteamboatWillie

  26. Trauma und Erinnerung

    "Insbesondere Verfahren, die mit Bildern arbeiten, wie imaginative Verfahren, stehen im Verdacht, Erinnerungsphänomene zu verfälschen oder gar Scheinerinnerungen zu produzieren. Jüngere Untersuchungen stellen dies infrage; sie haben ergeben, dass sich die Anzahl der richtigen Details im freien Abruf bei der Gruppe, die das imaginative Verfahren erhalten hatte, sogar verbesserte, nicht aber bei der Kontrollgruppe."

    link.springer.com/article/10.1

    #FalseMemory #Trauma

  27. Trauma und Erinnerung

    "Insbesondere Verfahren, die mit Bildern arbeiten, wie imaginative Verfahren, stehen im Verdacht, Erinnerungsphänomene zu verfälschen oder gar Scheinerinnerungen zu produzieren. Jüngere Untersuchungen stellen dies infrage; sie haben ergeben, dass sich die Anzahl der richtigen Details im freien Abruf bei der Gruppe, die das imaginative Verfahren erhalten hatte, sogar verbesserte, nicht aber bei der Kontrollgruppe."

    link.springer.com/article/10.1

    #FalseMemory #Trauma

  28. Trauma und Erinnerung

    "Insbesondere Verfahren, die mit Bildern arbeiten, wie imaginative Verfahren, stehen im Verdacht, Erinnerungsphänomene zu verfälschen oder gar Scheinerinnerungen zu produzieren. Jüngere Untersuchungen stellen dies infrage; sie haben ergeben, dass sich die Anzahl der richtigen Details im freien Abruf bei der Gruppe, die das imaginative Verfahren erhalten hatte, sogar verbesserte, nicht aber bei der Kontrollgruppe."

    link.springer.com/article/10.1

    #FalseMemory #Trauma

  29. Trauma und Erinnerung

    "Insbesondere Verfahren, die mit Bildern arbeiten, wie imaginative Verfahren, stehen im Verdacht, Erinnerungsphänomene zu verfälschen oder gar Scheinerinnerungen zu produzieren. Jüngere Untersuchungen stellen dies infrage; sie haben ergeben, dass sich die Anzahl der richtigen Details im freien Abruf bei der Gruppe, die das imaginative Verfahren erhalten hatte, sogar verbesserte, nicht aber bei der Kontrollgruppe."

    link.springer.com/article/10.1

    #FalseMemory #Trauma

  30. Trauma und Erinnerung

    "Insbesondere Verfahren, die mit Bildern arbeiten, wie imaginative Verfahren, stehen im Verdacht, Erinnerungsphänomene zu verfälschen oder gar Scheinerinnerungen zu produzieren. Jüngere Untersuchungen stellen dies infrage; sie haben ergeben, dass sich die Anzahl der richtigen Details im freien Abruf bei der Gruppe, die das imaginative Verfahren erhalten hatte, sogar verbesserte, nicht aber bei der Kontrollgruppe."

    link.springer.com/article/10.1

    #FalseMemory #Trauma

  31. The brain has a tell for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests. A new study used brain scans and eye tracking to measure how people remember events that never happened. The study found that false memories are associated with lower brain activity and less eye movement than true memories. #FalseMemory #BrainScan #LiveScience livescience.com/health/neurosc

  32. The brain has a tell for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests. A new study used brain scans and eye tracking to measure how people remember events that never happened. The study found that false memories are associated with lower brain activity and less eye movement than true memories. #FalseMemory #BrainScan #LiveScience livescience.com/health/neurosc

  33. The brain has a tell for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests. A new study used brain scans and eye tracking to measure how people remember events that never happened. The study found that false memories are associated with lower brain activity and less eye movement than true memories. #FalseMemory #BrainScan #LiveScience livescience.com/health/neurosc

  34. The brain has a tell for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests. A new study used brain scans and eye tracking to measure how people remember events that never happened. The study found that false memories are associated with lower brain activity and less eye movement than true memories. #FalseMemory #BrainScan #LiveScience livescience.com/health/neurosc

  35. So I saw a beautiful #butterfly right before jumping in the car to pick up my daughter. It flew away before I could snap a picture but 10 minutes later I drew a picture of it to try and look it up once we got home.
    Once we were home we quickly found it in a nearby tree and eventually even managed to get a picture... 🫣
    #EyeWitness #EyeWitnessTestimony #FalseMemory #Justice #Experiment
    (maybe this is a different butterfly too? Makes my point even more.)

  36. So I saw a beautiful #butterfly right before jumping in the car to pick up my daughter. It flew away before I could snap a picture but 10 minutes later I drew a picture of it to try and look it up once we got home.
    Once we were home we quickly found it in a nearby tree and eventually even managed to get a picture... 🫣
    #EyeWitness #EyeWitnessTestimony #FalseMemory #Justice #Experiment
    (maybe this is a different butterfly too? Makes my point even more.)

  37. So I saw a beautiful #butterfly right before jumping in the car to pick up my daughter. It flew away before I could snap a picture but 10 minutes later I drew a picture of it to try and look it up once we got home.
    Once we were home we quickly found it in a nearby tree and eventually even managed to get a picture... 🫣
    #EyeWitness #EyeWitnessTestimony #FalseMemory #Justice #Experiment
    (maybe this is a different butterfly too? Makes my point even more.)

  38. So I saw a beautiful #butterfly right before jumping in the car to pick up my daughter. It flew away before I could snap a picture but 10 minutes later I drew a picture of it to try and look it up once we got home.
    Once we were home we quickly found it in a nearby tree and eventually even managed to get a picture... 🫣
    #EyeWitness #EyeWitnessTestimony #FalseMemory #Justice #Experiment
    (maybe this is a different butterfly too? Makes my point even more.)

  39. So I saw a beautiful #butterfly right before jumping in the car to pick up my daughter. It flew away before I could snap a picture but 10 minutes later I drew a picture of it to try and look it up once we got home.
    Once we were home we quickly found it in a nearby tree and eventually even managed to get a picture... 🫣
    #EyeWitness #EyeWitnessTestimony #FalseMemory #Justice #Experiment
    (maybe this is a different butterfly too? Makes my point even more.)

  40. Ich bin überzeugt dass viele Inhalte auf YouTube, wo denen Menschen über ihre psychischen Erkrankungen sprechen, bei anderen, die das ansehen und sich damit identifizieren, das Risiko für falsche Erinnerungen extrem erhöhen. Und ich denke, mein Kind gehört zu denen die betroffen sind. Diese "schreckliche Kindheit mit krassem Mobbing": niemand der alten Schulfreund*innen weiß etwas davon.
    #FalseMemory

  41. CW: Sexualisierte Gewalt

    In der aktuellen Ausgabe von Psychologie heute, Mai 2023, gibt es einen sehr ausgewogenen Artikel zu False Memory, mit gutem Aufzeigen der Ungereimtheiten, wenn sich Betroffene erst in Therapien erinnern & einer tollen Erklärung zur Entstehung von Dissoziativer Identitätsstörung.
    Eventuell interessant für det.social/@Hoaxmaster@mastodo.
    Bitte bei Bedarf weiterleiten (Lydia Benecke fällt mir spontan ein, hat vermutlich kein Mastodonkonto).
    Sascha
    #Falsememory #DIS #OSDD #Pluralgang

  42. False memories are recollections of events that did not happen or happened differently from how they are remembered. False memories can have serious consequences, such as affecting eyewitness testimony, creating false accusations, or altering personal identity. A new study has found that false memories can be formed in as little as 8 seconds, depending on the type of memory and the context.

    #FalseMemory #MemoryResearch #Psychology

    sciencealert.com/your-brain-ca

  43. False memories are recollections of events that did not happen or happened differently from how they are remembered. False memories can have serious consequences, such as affecting eyewitness testimony, creating false accusations, or altering personal identity. A new study has found that false memories can be formed in as little as 8 seconds, depending on the type of memory and the context.

    #FalseMemory #MemoryResearch #Psychology

    sciencealert.com/your-brain-ca

  44. #Confabulation, false memory, or less often pseudomemory is a term in cognitive #psychology defined as a recollection of something that never happened. This can range from something as minor as misremembering an item on a list to fabricating an entire detailed, vivid #memory out of whole cloth. While it is intuitively obvious that memory is fallible, a great deal of #pseudoscience and #woo is built on the idea that all or at least some memory is infallible, as in much #anecdotal evidence. This assertion is unsupported by current evidence. Memory, in essence, is not akin to a tape recorder but a process that reconstructs past experience. This makes it highly susceptible to errors.

    The foundational works relating to confabulation in #memory were produced by Frederic Bartlett & Elizabeth Loftus.

    #RationalWiki #falsememory
    rationalwiki.org/wiki/Confabul

  45. #Confabulation, false memory, or less often pseudomemory is a term in cognitive #psychology defined as a recollection of something that never happened. This can range from something as minor as misremembering an item on a list to fabricating an entire detailed, vivid #memory out of whole cloth. While it is intuitively obvious that memory is fallible, a great deal of #pseudoscience and #woo is built on the idea that all or at least some memory is infallible, as in much #anecdotal evidence. This assertion is unsupported by current evidence. Memory, in essence, is not akin to a tape recorder but a process that reconstructs past experience. This makes it highly susceptible to errors.

    The foundational works relating to confabulation in #memory were produced by Frederic Bartlett & Elizabeth Loftus.

    #RationalWiki #falsememory
    rationalwiki.org/wiki/Confabul

  46. #Confabulation, false memory, or less often pseudomemory is a term in cognitive #psychology defined as a recollection of something that never happened. This can range from something as minor as misremembering an item on a list to fabricating an entire detailed, vivid #memory out of whole cloth. While it is intuitively obvious that memory is fallible, a great deal of #pseudoscience and #woo is built on the idea that all or at least some memory is infallible, as in much #anecdotal evidence. This assertion is unsupported by current evidence. Memory, in essence, is not akin to a tape recorder but a process that reconstructs past experience. This makes it highly susceptible to errors.

    The foundational works relating to confabulation in #memory were produced by Frederic Bartlett & Elizabeth Loftus.

    #RationalWiki #falsememory
    rationalwiki.org/wiki/Confabul

  47. #Confabulation, false memory, or less often pseudomemory is a term in cognitive #psychology defined as a recollection of something that never happened. This can range from something as minor as misremembering an item on a list to fabricating an entire detailed, vivid #memory out of whole cloth. While it is intuitively obvious that memory is fallible, a great deal of #pseudoscience and #woo is built on the idea that all or at least some memory is infallible, as in much #anecdotal evidence. This assertion is unsupported by current evidence. Memory, in essence, is not akin to a tape recorder but a process that reconstructs past experience. This makes it highly susceptible to errors.

    The foundational works relating to confabulation in #memory were produced by Frederic Bartlett & Elizabeth Loftus.

    #RationalWiki #falsememory
    rationalwiki.org/wiki/Confabul