In three experiments, we examine the extent to which participants' memory errors are affected by the perceptual features of an encoding series and imagery generation processes. Perceptual features were examined by manipulating the features associated with individual items as well as the relationships among items. An encoding instruction manipulation was included to examine the effects of explicit requests to generate images. In all three experiments, participants falsely claimed to have seen pictures of items presented as words, committing picture misattribution errors. These misattribution errors were exaggerated when the perceptual resemblance between pictures and images was relatively high (Experiment 1) and when explicit requests to generate images were omitted from encoding instructions (Experiments 1 and 2). When perceptual cues made the thematic relationships among items salient, the level and pattern of misattribution errors were also affected (Experiments 2 and 3). Results address alternative views about the nature of internal representations resulting in misattribution errors and refute the idea that these errors reflect only participants' general impressions or beliefs about what was seen.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2014.925565 | DOI Listing |
Behav Res Ther
January 2025
Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, United States.
Diagnostic overshadowing occurs when healthcare professionals misattribute an individual's presenting symptoms to other features of an individual's clinical presentation. Mental health providers may incorrectly diagnose and treat trauma-exposed individuals due to trauma-related diagnostic overshadowing bias. No research has investigated provider factors associated with this bias.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQ J Exp Psychol (Hove)
December 2024
Department of Psychology III, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
People often cannot remember the source of their memories despite recalling other elements of a remembered event correctly. Observation inflation is one such error of source monitoring. It refers to remembering the actions of another agent as self-performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry
October 2024
Mental Health Research Center, 34 Kashirskoye Sh, Moscow 115522, Russian Federation.
JAMA Netw Open
September 2024
Michigan Child Health Equity Collaborative, Ann Arbor.
Importance: Without knowledge of the degree of misattribution in racial and ethnic designations in data, studies run the risk of missing existing inequities and disparities and identifying others that do not exist. Further, accuracy of racial and ethnic designations is important to clinical care improvement efforts and health outcomes.
Objective: To determine the error rate of racial and ethnic attribution in the electronic medical records (EMRs) across the 3 largest pediatric health systems in Michigan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2024
Department of Neuroscience, Center for Theoretical Neuroscience and Zuckerman Mind, Brain, and Behavior Institute, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027.
When making decisions in a cluttered world, humans and other animals often have to hold multiple items in memory at once-such as the different items on a shopping list. Psychophysical experiments in humans and other animals have shown remembered stimuli can sometimes become confused, with participants reporting chimeric stimuli composed of features from different stimuli. In particular, subjects will often make "swap errors" where they misattribute a feature from one object as belonging to another object.
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