Book Chapter10.1007/978-1-4614-1195-6_4
Searching for Repressed Memory
Richard J. McNally
- 01 Jan 2012
- Vol. 58, pp 121-147
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TL;DR: This chapter summarizes the work of the research group on adults who report either repressed, recovered, or continuous memories of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) or who report no history of CSA, and suggests a third perspective on recovered memories that does not require the concept of repression.
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Abstract: This chapter summarizes the work of my research group on adults who report either repressed, recovered, or continuous memories of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) or who report no history of CSA. Adapting paradigms from cognitive psychology, we tested hypotheses inspired by both the “repressed memory” and “false memory” perspectives on recovered memories of CSA. We found some evidence for the false memory perspective, but no evidence for the repressed memory perspective. However, our work also suggests a third perspective on recovered memories that does not require the concept of repression. Some children do not understand their CSA when it occurs, and do not experience terror. Years later, they recall the experience, and understanding it as abuse, suffer intense distress. The memory failed to come to mind for years, partly because the child did not encode it as terrifying (i.e., traumatic), not because the person was unable to recall it.
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Citations
The Return of the Repressed: The Persistent and Problematic Claims of Long-Forgotten Trauma:
Henry Otgaar,Henry Otgaar,Henry Otgaar,Mark L. Howe,Mark L. Howe,Lawrence Patihis,Harald Merckelbach,Steven Jay Lynn,Scott O. Lilienfeld,Elizabeth F. Loftus +9 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the belief in repressed memories occurs on a nontrivial scale and appears to have increased among clinical psychologists since the 1990s, and that the scientifically controversial concept of dissociative amnesia, which is argued is a substitute term for memory repression, has gained in popularity.
The trauma model of dissociation: inconvenient truths and stubborn fictions. Comment on Dalenberg et al. (2012).
Steven Jay Lynn,Scott O. Lilienfeld,Harald Merckelbach,Timo Giesbrecht,Richard J. McNally,Elizabeth F. Loftus,Maggie Bruck,Maryanne Garry,Anne Malaktaris +8 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the field should now abandon the simple trauma-dissociation model and embrace multifactorial models that accommodate the diversity of causes of dissociation and dissociative disorders.
Motivated Forgetting and Misremembering: Perspectives from Betrayal Trauma Theory
Anne P. DePrince,Laura S. Brown,Ross E. Cheit,Jennifer J. Freyd,Steven N. Gold,Kathy Pezdek,Kathryn Quina +6 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: This chapter reviews conceptual and empirical issues central to the literature on memory for trauma and BTT as well as identifies future research directions derived from BTT.
90
The cognitive neuroscience of true and false memories.
Marcia K. Johnson,Carol L. Raye,Karen J. Mitchell,Elizabeth Ankudowich +3 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: Cognitive behavioral studies are discussed using both objective and subjective measures that provide much information about the encoding, revival and monitoring processes that yield both true and false memories.
Reports of Recovered Memories of Abuse in Therapy in a Large Age-Representative U.S. National Sample: Therapy Type and Decade Comparisons:
TL;DR: People who reported seeing therapists who discussed the possibility of repressed memories of abuse were 20 times more likely to report recovered abuse memories than those who did not.
References
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Vijay A. Mittal,Elaine F. Walker +1 more
TL;DR: An issue concerning the criteria for tic disorders is highlighted, and how this might affect classification of dyskinesias in psychotic spectrum disorders.
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The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud
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TL;DR: The Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud in English as mentioned in this paper is the first full paperback publication of the standard edition of the complete psychological works in English, containing twenty-four volumes.
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