Publication | Closed Access
Directed forgetting of trauma cues in adults reporting repressed or recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse.
71
Citations
19
References
2001
Year
Recovered MemoriesCognitionDirected ForgettingHuman MemoryExplicit MemoryPsychologySocial SciencesChildhood Sexual AbuseMemoryFalse MemoryHealth SciencesCognitive SciencePsychiatryChild AbuseExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionImplicit MemorySexual AssaultSocial MemoryMnemonicSexual AbuseCsa ExperienceAbuse StudiesChild Sexual AbuseTrauma CuesMemory LossTrauma In ChildPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
An item-cuing directed forgetting task was used to investigate whether women reporting repressed (n = 13) or recovered (n = 13) memories of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) exhibit an avoidant encoding style (and resultant impaired memory) for trauma cues relative to women reporting no CSA experience (n = 15). All participants viewed intermixed trauma (e.g., molested), positive (e.g., confident), and categorized neutral (e.g., mailbox) words on a computer screen and were instructed either to remember or to forget each word. The results provided no support for the hypothesis that people reporting either repressed or recovered memories of CSA are especially adept at forgetting words related to trauma. These groups recalled words they were instructed to remember more often than words they were instructed to forget regardless of whether they were trauma related.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1