Authors
D Stephen Lindsay, Marcia K Johnson, Paul Kwon
Publication date
1991/12/1
Journal
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Volume
52
Issue
3
Pages
297-318
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Previous research suggests that children are more likely than adults to confuse memories of actions they imagined themselves performing with memories of actions they actually performed (Realization Judgments), but are not more likely to confuse memories of actions they had imagined performing with memories of actions they saw another person perform (Reality Monitoring). We approach these findings in terms of a theory about the processes by which people identify the sources of their recollections (Source Monitoring). This approach suggests that children may be more likely than adults to confuse memories from different sources whenever the sources are highly similar to one another. Experiments 1 and 2 tested this hypothesis by manipulating the perceptual and semantic similarity of two sources of information and testing 4- and 6-year-old and adult subjects' recollection of the sources of particular pieces of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DS Lindsay, MK Johnson, P Kwon - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1991