2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2010.05.007
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

False rumors and true belief: Memory processes underlying children’s errant reports of rumored events

Abstract: Previous research has shown that overhearing an errant rumor-either from an adult or peers-about an earlier experience can lead children to make detailed false reports. This study investigates the extent to which such accounts are driven by changes in children's memory representations or merely social demands that encourage the reporting of rumored information. This was accomplished by a) using a warning manipulation that eliminated social pressures to report an earlier-heard rumor and b) examining the qualita… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

4
28
0

Year Published

2012
2012
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
5
1
1

Relationship

2
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 23 publications
(32 citation statements)
references
References 38 publications
4
28
0
Order By: Relevance
“…This suggests that children really came to believe that these details were experienced, even though they had been given two opportunities to retract this information. Similar false beliefs have been reported for 3Á4-year-old children who were given a warning to ignore false rumours (Principe, Haines, Adkins, & Guiliano, 2010). The implications for this are worrying, since they suggest that collaborative recall with a co-witness can encourage distortions based on integration of non-experienced detail into memory.…”
Section: Children's Social Contamination Of Memory 589supporting
confidence: 60%
“…This suggests that children really came to believe that these details were experienced, even though they had been given two opportunities to retract this information. Similar false beliefs have been reported for 3Á4-year-old children who were given a warning to ignore false rumours (Principe, Haines, Adkins, & Guiliano, 2010). The implications for this are worrying, since they suggest that collaborative recall with a co-witness can encourage distortions based on integration of non-experienced detail into memory.…”
Section: Children's Social Contamination Of Memory 589supporting
confidence: 60%
“…A consistent pattern in studies of rumor and memory (Principe et al, 2006; Principe, Haines, et al, 2010) is that children who hear a false rumor from peers are more likely than those who hear it from an adult to report seeing rumored information and to generate more elaborate false narratives describing the rumor. 1 This heightened peer suggestibility is in contrast to the typical result in laboratory paradigms that children more often comply with postevent suggestions planted by adults than those made by peers (Ceci, Toglia, & Ross, 1990).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Research focusing on children’s autobiographical memory demonstrates that such exchanges can change the way that experienced events are represented and remembered, particularly when conversational partners differ in their renderings of the event. For instance, talking with co-witnesses who experienced a slightly different version of the same event (e.g., Candel, Memon, & Al-Harazi, 2007; Principe & Ceci, 2002), who overheard errant information about a shared event (e.g., Principe, Kanaya, Ceci, & Singh, 2006; Principe, Haines, Adkins, & Guiliano, 2010), or who generated erroneous inferences about the past (Principe, Guiliano, & Root, 2008) can distort children’s recollections in ways consistent with their conversational partner’s experiences. Despite the growing number of demonstrations of the mnemonic effects of memory exchanges on children’s event recall, little is known about the content of such conversations and which specific qualities of these discussions are linked to later errors in remembering.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To examine this issue, we used a warning manipulation that minimized social pressures to report an overheard rumor about an experienced event and we examined the qualitative characteristics of children’s false narratives prompted by the rumor (Principe, Haines, Adkins, & Guiliano, 2010). Three- to 6-year-olds watched a magic show in their schools and we replicated the Overheard, Classmate, and Control procedures from our rumor original study.…”
Section: Representational Changesmentioning
confidence: 99%