“…Inaccuracies in autobiographical memory have long been of concern in psychology, but they did not receive a great deal of attention until relatively recently. Most memory experts have concluded that autobiographical memory is reasonably accurate (see above), but there is also widespread consensus that human memory involves complex reconstructive processes that often result in distorted memory (Bartlett, 1932;Bonanno, 1990;Freud, 1899Freud, /1962Lindsay and Read, 1994;Loftus and Loftus, 1980;Schacter, 1995;Spence, 1982). General conclusions such as these are useful, but they beg a number of specific questions regarding the precise level of accuracy in childhood memory, individual differences in memory reliability, and differences in memory reliability across domains of experience (e.g., memory for discrete events compared with memory for the nature of parent-child relationships).…”