РефератыИностранный языкFaFalse Memory Essay Research Paper Saetern ChrisPsychologyPPMark

False Memory Essay Research Paper Saetern ChrisPsychologyPPMark

False Memory Essay, Research Paper


Saetern Chris


Psychology


PP:Mark Art


Spring,99


TTH 5PM


Saetern@usa.net


FALSE MEMORY SYNDROME – IS IT POSSIBLE OR NOT?


Memory is the mental faculty of retaining and recalling past experiences. A


repressed memory is one that is retained in the sub conscious mind, where


one is not aware of it but where it can still affect both conscious thoughts


and behavior.


When memory is distorted or confabulated, the result can be what has been


called the False Memory Syndrome: a condition in which a person’s identity


and interpersonal relationships are entered around a memory of traumatic


experience which is objectively false but in which the person strongly


believes. Note that the syndrome is not characterized by false memories as


such. We all have memories that are inaccurate. Rather, the syndrome may be


diagnosed when the memory is so deeply ingrained that it orients the


individual’s entire personality and lifestyle, in turn disrupting all sorts


of other adaptive behaviors. The analogy to personality disorder is


intentional. False memory syndrome is especially destructive because the


person assiduously avoids confrontation with any evidence that might


challenge the memory. Thus it takes on a life of its own, encapsulated and


resistant to correction. The person may become so focused on the memory that


he or she may be effectively distracted from coping with real problems in


his or her life.


– John F. Kihlstrom, Ph.D.


There are many models which try to explain how memory works. Nevertheless,


we do not know exactly how memory works. One of the most questionable models


of memory is the one which assumes that every experience a person has had is


‘recorded’ in memory and that some of these memories are of traumatic events


too terrible to want to remember. These terrible memories are locked away in


the sub conscious mind, i.e. repressed, only to be remembered in adulthood


when some triggering event opens the door to the unconscious. And, both


before and after the repressed memory is remembered, it causes physical and


mental disorders in a person.


Some people have made an effort to explain their pain, even cancer, as


coming from repressed memories of incest in the body. Scientists have


studied related phenomenon such as people whose hands bleed in certain


religious settings. Presumably such people, called stigmatics, “are not


revealing unconscious memories of being crucified as young children, but


rather are demonstrating a fascinating psychogenic anomaly that springs from


their conscious fixation on the suffering of Christ. Similarly, it is


possible that conscious fixation on the idea that one was sexually abused


might increase the frequency of some physical symptoms, regardless of


whether or not the abuse really occurred.”(Lindsay & Read, 1994)


This view of memory has two elements: (1) the accuracy element and (2) the


causal element. The reason this model is questionable is not because people


don’t have unpleasant or painful experiences they would rather forget, nor


is it claiming that children often experience both wonderful and brutal


things for which they have no conceptual or linguistic framework and hence


are incapable of understanding them, much less relating it to others. It is


questionable because this model maintains that because (a) one is having


problems of functioning as a healthy human being and (b) one remembers being


abused as a child that therefore (A) one was abused as a child and (B) the


childhood abuse is the cause of one’s adulthood problems.


There is no evidence that supports the claim that we remember everything


that we experience. In fact, there is plenty of evidence to support the


claim that it is impossible for us to even attend to all the perceptual


elements of any given experience, much less to recall them all. There is no


evidence to support the claim that all memories of experiences happened as


they remembered to have happened or that they have even happened at all. And


there is no evidence to support the claim that subjective certainty about


the accuracy of memories or the vividness of memories significantly


correlates with accuracy. Finally, the claim of a causal connection between


abuse and health or behavior does not warrant concluding that ill health,


mental or physical, is a ’sign’ of having been abused.


This model is the basis for a number of pseudoscientific works on child


abuse by self-proclaimed experts such as Ellen Bass, E. Sue Blum, Laura


Davis, Beverly Engel, Beverly Holman, Wendy Maltz and Mary Jane Williams.


Through communal reinforcement many empirically unsupported notions,


including the claim that about half of all women have been sexually abused,


get treated as a ‘fact’ by many people. Psychologist Carol Tavris writes


In what can only be called an incestuous arrangement, the authors of these


books all rely on one another’s work as supporting evidence for their own;


they all recommend one another’s books to their readers. If one of them


comes up with a concocted statistic–such as “more than half of all women


survivors of childhood sexual trauma “– the numbers are traded like


baseball cards, reprinted in every book and eventually enshrined as fact.


Thus the cycle of misinformation, faulty statistics and unvalidated


assertions maintains itself. (Tavris, 1993)


The only difference between this group of experts and say, a group of


physicists is that the child abuse experts have achieved their status as


authorities not by scientific training but by either (a) experience [they


were victims themselves or they have treated victims of abuse in their


capacity as social workers] or (b) they wrote a book on child abuse. The


child abuse experts are not trained in scientific research which is not a


comment on their ability to write or to do therapy, but which does seem to


be one reason for their scientific illiteracy. (Tavris, 1993)


Here are a few of the unproved, unscientifically researched notions that


are being bandied around by these child abuse experts: One, if you doubt


that you were abused as a child or think that it might be your imagination,


this is a sign of ‘post-incest syndrome’. Two, if you can not remember any


specific instances of being abused, but still have a feeling that something


abusive happened to you, ‘it probably did’. Three, when a person can not


remember his or her childhood or have very fuzzy memories, ‘incest must


always be considered as a possibility’. And four, ‘If you have any suspicion


at all, if you have any memory, no matter how vague, it probably really


happened. It is far more likely that you are blocking the memories, denying


it happened’.


There have been many symptoms suggested as indicators of past abuse. These


symptoms range from headaches to irritable bowls. In fact, one psychologist


compiled a list of over 900 different symptoms that had been presented as


proof of a history of abuse. When he reviewed the professional literature,


he found that not one of the symptoms could be shown to be an inclusive


indication of a history of abuse. Given the lack of consistent scientific


evidence, therapists must be careful in declaring that abuse has infact


occurred. (London, 1995)


Whole industries have been built up out of the hysteria that inevitably


accompanies charges of the sexual abuse of children. Therapists who are


supposed to help children recover from the trauma of the abuse are hired to


interrogate the child, in order to find out if they have been abused. But


all too often the therapist suggests the abuse to the child and the child


has ‘memories’ of being abused, but no rational person should find a parent


or caretaker guilty on the basis of such tainted testimony. [note 1]


Increasingly throughout the continent, grown children under going


therapeutic programs have come to believe that they suffer from “repressed


memories” of incest and sexual abuse. While some reports of incest and


sexual abuse are surely true, these decade delayed memories are too often


the result of False Memory Syndrome caused by a disastrous “therapeutic”


program. False Memory Syndrome has a devastating effect on the victim and


typically produces a continuing dependency on the very program that creates


the syndrome. False Memory Syndrome proceeds to destroy the psychological


well being not only of the primary victim but through false accusations of


incest and sexual abuse other members of the primary victim’s family. The


American Medical Association considers recovered memories of childhood


sexual abuse to be of uncertain authenticity, which should be subject to


external verification. The use of recovered memories is fraught with


problems of potential misapplication.[note 2]


The dangers of this model are apparent: not only are false memories treated


as real memories, but real memories of real abuse may be treated as false


memories and may provide real abusers with a believable defense. In the end,


no one benefits from encouraging a belief in memory which is unfounded.


Whatever the theory of memory one advocates, if it does not entail examining


corroborating evidence and attempting to independently verify claims of


recollected abuse, it is a theory which will cause more harm than good.


Carl Jung, an early Freudian disciple and later heretic, extended this


model of memory by adding another area of repressed memories to the


unconscious mind, an area that was not based on individual past experiences


at all: the “collective” unconscious. The collective unconscious is the


repository for acts and mental patterns shared either by members of a


culture or universally by all humans. Under certain conditions these


manifest themselves as archetype: images, patterns and symbols, that are


often seen in dreams or fantasies and that appear as themes in mythology,


religion and fairy

tales. The Archetype of the Archetype Model can be traced


back to Plato’s various beliefs about the eidos. (Forms of reality which


were variously described by Plato but always were held up as ‘more real’


than the world of sense experience which, in some way, was always held up as


inferior to and dependant on the eidos.)


The Platonic Model avoids the problem of determining whether or not a


memory is accurate by claiming that the memory is not of a personal


experience at all. It also confuses several types of mental states. It


completely blurs the distinction between dream states and conscious states


by eliminating the difference between remembering a sense experience one


actually had and remembering a sense experience one never actually had. This


model gives validity to every fantasy and desire. If one is clever, though,


one can destroy the first model with the second one. For example, a Jungian


could claim that the repressed memories of all those who are now blaming


their current troubles on forgotten and repressed memories of child abuse,


are not memories of actual abuse but of an Archetype, the Abused Child


Archetype. The story of Hansel and Gretel might be pulled in for


“scientific” support of the idea. Unsupported assertions might be made


regarding the unconscious desire of all children to be loved by their


parents: as children, love could only be understood in terms of ego


gratification, but as adults love is understood primarily in sexual terms.


Because of the incest taboo, we can not bear the thought of wanting to be


loved sexually by our parents, so this desire must be expressed in a


perverse and inverse way: our parents love us sexually. But there is no


evidence for this based upon our past or current relationship with our


parents, so the mind creates the evidence by remembering being sexually


abused as a child. Thus, the memory we have as adults of being sexually


abused by our parents is actually the expression of the universal desire to


be loved by our mother and father. It has nothing to do with any real


experience; it has everything to do with a universal human desire. It also


serves as a convenient excuse to absolve us of all responsibility for our


failures and incompetence. The reason we are so screwed up is because our


parents screwed us!


How accurate and reliable is memory? We’re often wrong in thinking we


accurately remember things. Studies on memory have shown that we often


construct our memories after the fact, that we are susceptible to


suggestions from others that help us fill in the gaps in our memories of


certain events. (Hyman, Jr., Husband & Billings, 1995) That is why, for


example, a police officer investigating a crime should not show a picture of


a single individual to a victim and ask if the victim recognizes the


assailant. If the victim is then presented a line up and picks out the


individual whose picture the victim had been shown, there is no way of


knowing whether the victim is remembering the assailant or the picture.


Another interesting fact about memory is that studies have shown that there


is no significant correlation between the subjective feeling of certainty a


person has about memory and that memory being accurate. Also, contrary to


what many believe, hypnosis does not aid memory’s accuracy because subjects


are extremely suggestible while under hypnosis. (Loftus, 1980) It is


possible to create false memories in people’s minds by suggestion.


The mind does not record every detail of an event, but only a few features;


we fill in the rest on what “must have been.” For an event to make it to


long term storage, a person has to perceive it, encode it and rehearse it


–tell about it– or it decays. (This seems to be the major mechanism behind


childhood amnesia, the fact that children do not develop long term memory


until roughly age three.) Otherwise, research finds, even emotional


experiences we are sure we will never forget –the Kennedy assassination,


the Challenger explosion– will fade from memory, and errors will creep into


the account that remain.(Travis, 1993)


Research articles and court testimony confirm the wide spread use of memory


enhancement techniques, in the belief that these will help recover accurate


“memories”. These techniques include hypnosis, sodium amytal, dream


interpretation, guided imagery, journaling, body massages, participation in


survivor groups and reading of self help books. In the summer of 1993, the


American Medical Association passed a resolution warning of the dangers of


misapplication in the use of these techniques. In June of 1994 they issued a


warning about all recovered memories. Both the AMA and the American


Psychiatric Association have stated:


..there is no completely accurate way of determining the validity of reports


in the absence of corroborating information.[note 3]


The problem with the practices mentioned above is that when they are used


they increase the risk of influence and suggestibility.


Why would someone remember something so horrible if it really did not


happen? This is a haunting question, but there are several possible


explanations which might shed light on some of the false memories. A


pseudomemory, for example, may be a kind of symbolic expression of troubled


family relationships. There may be a cultural climate in our society in


which the belief in the relationship between sexual abuse and individual


pathology is nurtured. It may be that in such a climate people more readily


believe things happened when they didn’t. When people enter therapy, they do


so to get better. They want to change. People also tend to look for some


explanation for why they have a problem. Clients come to trust the person


they have chosen to help them. Because they are trying to get better,


clients tend to rely on the therapist’s opinion. If the therapist believes


that the reason that the client has a problem is because of some past


trauma, and especially if the therapist believes that the patient will not


get better unless he or she remembers the trauma, the patient will work to


find what he or she thinks is a trauma memory in order to get better.


Richard Ofshe, Ph.D. and Ethan Watters noted that, “No one — not the


patients, therapists, parents or critics of recovered memory therapy –


question that this therapy is an intensely difficult and painful experience.


That the pain of therapy is real should not be accepted, however, as an


argument that the memories uncovered are accurate. One’s emotional reaction


to a perceived memory need not correlate with the veracity of that event,


but rather only to whether one believes that event to be true.”[note 4]


Therapists may believe that they are helping clients and improving a


culture in which sex abuse is far too prevalent. A patient may find group


acceptance in the cadre of survivors and find “the” reason for problems.


Patients suffering from severe psychological symptoms are known to engage in


what is called, “effort after meaning” (Bass & Davis, 1988), in that they


seek some explanation, however remote, for suffering.


So, should accounts of repressed memory be dismissed out of hand? Of course


not! But there should be an attempt to corroborate such memories with


independent evidence and testimony before drawing conclusions about actual


abuses or crimes. Such accounts should be taken very seriously and should be


critically examined, giving them all the attention and investigative


analysis we would give to any allegation of crime. But we should not rush to


judgement, either about the accuracy of the memories of about the causal


connection between past experiences and present problems. We should neither


automatically reject as false memories which have been repressed for years


and are suddenly recollected, nor should we automatically accept such


memories as true. In terms of verification of their accuracy, these memories


should not be treated any differently than any other type of memory.


Bibliography


NOTES


1. Yet, it has happened. In a modern version of the Salem witch hunts, the


McMartin pre-school case exemplifies the very worst in institutionalized


justice on the hunt for child molesters.


See, Mason, M. (Sept. 1991). The McMartin case revisited: the conflict


between social work and criminal justice, Social Work, v.36, no.5.


391-396. [on evaluating the credibility of children as witnesses in sexual


abuse cases] ,


2. See, Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical


Association, June 16.


3. See, Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical


Association, June 16.


4. See, Ofshe, R., & Watters, E., (1994). Making Monsters: False Memory,


Psychotherapy and Sexual Hysteria. p.109.


REFERENCES


Bass, E. & Davis, L., (1988). The Courage To Heal, p.173.


Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical Association, June 16.


Hyman, I.E. Jr., Husband, T.H. & Billings, F.J., (1995). Prompting false


childhood memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 9, pp.181-197.


Lindsay, S. & Read, D., (1994). Applied Cognitive Psychology, 8, p.302.


London., (1995). Independent Practitioner, March 1, 64.


Loftus, E., (1980). Memory, Surprising New Insights Into How We Remember


and Why We Forget, Reading, Mass,: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co.


Loftus, E., & Ketcham, K., (1987). Eye Witness Testimony: Civil and


Criminal, New York, N.Y.: Kluwer Law Book Publishers.


Loftus, E., (1980). Eye Witness Testimony, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard


University Press.


Mason, M., (Sept. 1991). The McMartin case revisited: the conflict between


social work and criminal justice,” Social Work, 36, no. 5, pp.391-396.


Ofshe, R., & Watters, E., (1994). Making Monsters: False Memory,


Psychotherapy and Sexual Hysteria. p.109.


Tavris, C., (1993). Hysteria and the Incest Survivor Machine, Sacramento


Bee, Forum section, January 17, p.1.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: False Memory Essay Research Paper Saetern ChrisPsychologyPPMark

Слов:3480
Символов:23691
Размер:46.27 Кб.