Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
http://www.slate.com/articles/healt...earch_on_eyewitnesses_child_abuse.single.html
It's scary that people have been convicted based on "repressed memories", but even other things can be misremembered, or events that never even happened might be remembered as if they did happen. The implications particularly for criminal justice seem to be very important.
AG: How did you end up studying false memories?
EL: Early in my career, I had done some very theoretical studies of memory, and after that I wanted to [do] work that had more obvious practical uses. The memory of witnesses to crimes and accidents was a natural place to go. In particular I looked at what happens when people are questioned about their experiences. I would ultimately see those questions as a means by which the memories got contaminated.
AG: You're known for debunking the idea of repressed memories. Why focus on them?
EL: In the 1990s we began to see these recovered-memory cases. In the first big one, a man called George Franklin was on trial. His daughter claimed she had witnessed her father kill her best friend when she was 8 years old—but had only remembered this 20 years later. And that she had been raped by him and repressed that memory too. Franklin was convicted of the murder, and that started this repressed-memory ball rolling through the legal system. We began to see hundreds of cases where people were accusing others based on claims of repressed memory. That's what first got me interested.
It's scary that people have been convicted based on "repressed memories", but even other things can be misremembered, or events that never even happened might be remembered as if they did happen. The implications particularly for criminal justice seem to be very important.