“…A host of studies have examined these social conformity effects on a variety of judgments (e.g., Baron, Vandello, & Brunsman, 1996;Hoffman, Granhag, Kwong See, & Loftus, 2001), and a growing number of studies have examined these effects on explicit recognition judgments (Allan & Gabbert, 2008;Axmacher, Gossen, Elger, & Fell, 2010;Gabbert, Memon, & Wright, 2007;Meade & Roediger, 2002;Reysen, 2005;Schneider & Watkins, 1996;Walther, Bless, Strack, Rackstraw, Wagner, and Werth 2002;Wright, Gabbert, Memon, & London, 2008;Wright, Self, & Justice, 2000). In general, the findings have shown that participants will shift their recognition memory decisions toward confederates' even when those confederates' reports are incorrect, a phenomenon termed "memory conformity."…”