Misremembering Bartlett: a study in serial reproduction.

Br J Psychol

Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK.

Published: May 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bartlett is often credited with the idea that memory is inherently distorted rather than accurate, a view supported by many contemporary psychologists.
  • Despite these claims, the authors argue that Bartlett did not completely reject the idea of accurate memory; instead, he aimed to challenge the assumption that memory is mostly reliable.
  • The paper highlights that Bartlett provided examples of detailed and accurate recall in his experiments and attempted to explain these phenomena through his schema theory.

Article Abstract

According to much of the recent psychological literature on memory, Bartlett should be credited with the insight that remembering can never be accurate but is, instead, more or less of a distortion (a view to which many modern authors themselves seem to subscribe). In the present paper, we argue that Bartlett did not himself provide such an unqualified account of remembering. Although he sought to challenge the idea that remembering is largely an accurate record of past events, he did not maintain that it is always inaccurate. Despite unqualified claims by Bartlett to the contrary, neither his own experiments nor his theoretical position warrant the conclusion that remembering is inherently unreliable. Indeed, as we explain, Bartlett himself provides several examples of impressively detailed and accurate recall, and sought to explain them within the framework of his schema theory.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1348/000712602162562DOI Listing

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