Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about "prestige enhancing memory distortions," and explains that these are sometimes responsible for two people witnessing the same event, but remembering different details.
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about the drowning death of her mother and explains how recalling that event brought the subject of memory distortion home to Dr. Loftus and her family years later in a very personal way.
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus explains that, "...memory does not work like a tape recorder. We don't just record the event and play it back later the way a videotape might work." Instead, Dr. Loftus says, when we are exposed ...
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about experiments in which subjects are asked to recall details of a simulated accident they've witnessed. Dr. Loftus explains that, as part of the experiment, a suggestion about what might...
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus explains that, while all people are susceptible to memory contamination, children between the ages of three and six appear to be more susceptible than older children and adults.
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about the case of the Ramona family, which was torn apart after daughter Holly went through therapy that led to her remembering alleged abuses which she claims occurred years earlier at the...
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about our ability to remember significant events, even if they took place years earlier. But like any memories, these are subject to change, distortion and contamination.
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus is skeptical about cases in which people claim to recall horrific experiences that they've previously repressed. "I believe in many instances they are a product of suggestion, imagination and som...
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus explains that, "...if you let the memory fade a little bit so it weakens, it then becomes more and more vulnerable to suggestion, to post-event contamination."
Experimental psychologist and author Elizabeth Loftus talks about the controversy that surrounds the subject of false or repressed memories. "Some insurance companies have refused to insure psychotherapists if they do recovered memory therapy," Dr. ...