Dissociative tendencies and memory performance on directed forgetting tasks
Author(s)
Devilly, Grant J
Ciorciari, Joseph
Piesse, Amy
Sherwell, Sarah
Zammit, Sonia
Cook, Fallon
Turton, Christie
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2007
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The current article presents two studies that aimed to replicate DePrince and Freyd's (2001, 2004) studies demonstrating that high and low dissociators differentially recall neutral and trauma words under conditions of varying cognitive load. We did not find this effect. This lack of replication was apparent for both free recall and word recognition memory and in both studies. In effect, we found little evidence to support betrayal trauma theory, yet observed increased memory fallibility, as demonstrated by lower general recall and (in one study) commission errors, in high dissociators.The current article presents two studies that aimed to replicate DePrince and Freyd's (2001, 2004) studies demonstrating that high and low dissociators differentially recall neutral and trauma words under conditions of varying cognitive load. We did not find this effect. This lack of replication was apparent for both free recall and word recognition memory and in both studies. In effect, we found little evidence to support betrayal trauma theory, yet observed increased memory fallibility, as demonstrated by lower general recall and (in one study) commission errors, in high dissociators.
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Journal Title
Psychological Science
Volume
18
Issue
3
Publisher URI
Subject
Cognitive and computational psychology