The conclusion seems to be that the vivid ads implanted the false memory of having tasted the popcorn into the minds of the subjects.
This conclusion does not appear to be supported. It's well known that false memories can be created, and that people are generally pretty terrible at remembering even recent events. One classic experiment involves a faked murder in a court room, where the audience (whop don't know it's fake) are interviewed almost immediately afterwards, but mostly get the gender, colour, and even number of attackers wrong. Then there are things such as getting a child to describe their meeting with Bugs Bunny at Disneyland, despite it not being a Disney character. In the former, it's simply bad memory. In the latter, it's deliberately creating false memory by suggestion.
The thing is, in the experiment in question, it appears both are possible explanations. Maybe the subjects created a false memory themselves just from being asked the question. Maybe the experimenters asked leading questions (unwittingly or deliberately) to create the false memory themselves. Hell, maybe it was a really good advert and everyone went straight out and had some popcorn, then got that confused with the experiment.
As it is, it seems a classic case of "correlation does not equal causation". Sure, people saw adverts and later had a false memory. But without eliminating all the other various ways a false memory could have been generated, it's not possible to conclude that it must have been the advert that caused it.
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Actually, this sounds particularly suspicious to me. Firstly, assume that all other possibilities had been eliminated and the adverts were the only possible source of false memories. That means that the group who had popcorn should almost all report having had popcorn, while the group who didn't should report having it in an amount that depends on how effective the adverts are. But if both groups are just as likely to report having had popcorn, that means that either the adverts are almost 100% effective at creating false memories, or they actually create false memories that people didn't have popcorn. It seems likely the former would be explicitly stated in reports ("Adverts create false memories in everyone!") rather than just saying "equally likely", and the latter is directly opposed to the actual point being made.One week later the subjects of both groups who saw the vivid ads were "just as likely" to report having tasted the popcorn.
Either way, it doesn't quite seem to add up. If the advert really created the false memory, the group that actually had popcorn should still report having had popcorn significantly more than the group which didn't. Since that's not the case, the conclusion that the false memories were created by the advert just doesn't seem to hold up. It would be very interesting to see the results of asking the same questions of a group that had neither advert or popcorn (or presumably adverts for a different food would be a better placebo group).
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