Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach

The social contagion of memory effect refers to a propensity for an individual to incorporate information provided by others into the individual’s recall. Notably, both true and false memories may be transmitted from one individual to another. The social influence behind this phenomenon stems from n...

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Main Author: Low, Merwyn Hong Wei
Other Authors: Rebecca Nichols
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159044
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1590442023-03-05T15:42:24Z Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach Low, Merwyn Hong Wei Rebecca Nichols School of Social Sciences r.nichols@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology The social contagion of memory effect refers to a propensity for an individual to incorporate information provided by others into the individual’s recall. Notably, both true and false memories may be transmitted from one individual to another. The social influence behind this phenomenon stems from normative and informative influence where individuals conform to the memory of others due to affiliative motives and a relative evaluation of memory accuracy between source and self. Through the use of a novel procedure, the present study attempted to diminish the effects of normative influence and study the mechanisms behind informative influence. The purpose of the study aimed to investigate the effects of exposure to a social source (vs. non-social source) of misinformation and stimulus presentation duration (15 seconds vs. 60 seconds) on both true and false recall. Misinformation was disguised using a recognition task given to participants in between an initial recall task and a final recall task. Overall, main effects were found for both exposure to a social source of misinformation and memory strength for both true recall and false recall. However, an interaction effect was found only for false recall. The present study extends the findings of Wright’s (2010) social influence model and suggests that individuals who perceive a social source of information would perceive it as more credible than a nonsocial source. Furthermore, receiving contradictory information from a social source may decrease belief in one’s memory. These findings have important implications on judicial procedures and efforts to combat fake news. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2022-06-09T04:50:01Z 2022-06-09T04:50:01Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Low, M. H. W. (2022). Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159044 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159044 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Low, Merwyn Hong Wei
Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
description The social contagion of memory effect refers to a propensity for an individual to incorporate information provided by others into the individual’s recall. Notably, both true and false memories may be transmitted from one individual to another. The social influence behind this phenomenon stems from normative and informative influence where individuals conform to the memory of others due to affiliative motives and a relative evaluation of memory accuracy between source and self. Through the use of a novel procedure, the present study attempted to diminish the effects of normative influence and study the mechanisms behind informative influence. The purpose of the study aimed to investigate the effects of exposure to a social source (vs. non-social source) of misinformation and stimulus presentation duration (15 seconds vs. 60 seconds) on both true and false recall. Misinformation was disguised using a recognition task given to participants in between an initial recall task and a final recall task. Overall, main effects were found for both exposure to a social source of misinformation and memory strength for both true recall and false recall. However, an interaction effect was found only for false recall. The present study extends the findings of Wright’s (2010) social influence model and suggests that individuals who perceive a social source of information would perceive it as more credible than a nonsocial source. Furthermore, receiving contradictory information from a social source may decrease belief in one’s memory. These findings have important implications on judicial procedures and efforts to combat fake news.
author2 Rebecca Nichols
author_facet Rebecca Nichols
Low, Merwyn Hong Wei
format Final Year Project
author Low, Merwyn Hong Wei
author_sort Low, Merwyn Hong Wei
title Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
title_short Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
title_full Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
title_fullStr Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
title_full_unstemmed Investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
title_sort investigating memory conformity and item accuracy: a modified approach
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159044
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