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- > * Name: FLSMEM.TXT
- > * Language: English
- > * Subject: PSYCHOLOGY
- > * Title: FALSE MEMORY SYNDROME - IS IT POSSIBLE OR NOT?
- > * Grade: 79%
- > * System: UNIVERSITY
- > * Age: 23
- > * Country:CANADA
- > * Comments: GOOD ESSAY ABOUT THE THEORY BEHIND THE CONDITION ASWELL AS
- CRITICISM FOR THE EXPERTS
- Memory is the mental faculty of retaining and recalling past experiences. A
- repressed memory is one that is retained in the sub conscious mind, where
- one is not aware of it but where it can still affect both conscious thoughts
- and behavior.
-
- When memory is distorted or confabulated, the result can be what has been
- called the False Memory Syndrome: a condition in which a person's identity
- and interpersonal relationships are entered around a memory of traumatic
- experience which is objectively false but in which the person strongly
- believes. Note that the syndrome is not characterized by false memories as
- such. We all have memories that are inaccurate. Rather, the syndrome may be
- diagnosed when the memory is so deeply ingrained that it orients the
- individual's entire personality and lifestyle, in turn disrupting all sorts
- of other adaptive behaviors. The analogy to personality disorder is
- intentional. False memory syndrome is especially destructive because the
- person assiduously avoids confrontation with any evidence that might
- challenge the memory. Thus it takes on a life of its own, encapsulated and
- resistant to correction. The person may become so focused on the memory that
- he or she may be effectively distracted from coping with real problems in
- his or her life.
-
- -- John F. Kihlstrom, Ph.D.
-
- There are many models which try to explain how memory works. Nevertheless,
- we do not know exactly how memory works. One of the most questionable models
- of memory is the one which assumes that every experience a person has had is
- 'recorded' in memory and that some of these memories are of traumatic events
- too terrible to want to remember. These terrible memories are locked away in
- the sub conscious mind, i.e. repressed, only to be remembered in adulthood
- when some triggering event opens the door to the unconscious. And, both
- before and after the repressed memory is remembered, it causes physical and
- mental disorders in a person.
-
- Some people have made an effort to explain their pain, even cancer, as
- coming from repressed memories of incest in the body. Scientists have
- studied related phenomenon such as people whose hands bleed in certain
- religious settings. Presumably such people, called stigmatics, "are not
- revealing unconscious memories of being crucified as young children, but
- rather are demonstrating a fascinating psychogenic anomaly that springs from
- their conscious fixation on the suffering of Christ. Similarly, it is
- possible that conscious fixation on the idea that one was sexually abused
- might increase the frequency of some physical symptoms, regardless of
- whether or not the abuse really occurred."(Lindsay & Read, 1994)
-
- This view of memory has two elements: (1) the accuracy element and (2) the
- causal element. The reason this model is questionable is not because people
- don't have unpleasant or painful experiences they would rather forget, nor
- is it claiming that children often experience both wonderful and brutal
- things for which they have no conceptual or linguistic framework and hence
- are incapable of understanding them, much less relating it to others. It is
- questionable because this model maintains that because (a) one is having
- problems of functioning as a healthy human being and (b) one remembers being
- abused as a child that therefore (A) one was abused as a child and (B) the
- childhood abuse is the cause of one's adulthood problems.
-
- There is no evidence that supports the claim that we remember everything
- that we experience. In fact, there is plenty of evidence to support the
- claim that it is impossible for us to even attend to all the perceptual
- elements of any given experience, much less to recall them all. There is no
- evidence to support the claim that all memories of experiences happened as
- they remembered to have happened or that they have even happened at all. And
- there is no evidence to support the claim that subjective certainty about
- the accuracy of memories or the vividness of memories significantly
- correlates with accuracy. Finally, the claim of a causal connection between
- abuse and health or behavior does not warrant concluding that ill health,
- mental or physical, is a 'sign' of having been abused.
-
- This model is the basis for a number of pseudoscientific works on child
- abuse by self-proclaimed experts such as Ellen Bass, E. Sue Blum, Laura
- Davis, Beverly Engel, Beverly Holman, Wendy Maltz and Mary Jane Williams.
- Through communal reinforcement many empirically unsupported notions,
- including the claim that about half of all women have been sexually abused,
- get treated as a 'fact' by many people. Psychologist Carol Tavris writes
-
- In what can only be called an incestuous arrangement, the authors of these
- books all rely on one another's work as supporting evidence for their own;
- they all recommend one another's books to their readers. If one of them
- comes up with a concocted statistic--such as "more than half of all women
- survivors of childhood sexual trauma "-- the numbers are traded like
- baseball cards, reprinted in every book and eventually enshrined as fact.
- Thus the cycle of misinformation, faulty statistics and unvalidated
- assertions maintains itself. (Tavris, 1993)
-
- The only difference between this group of experts and say, a group of
- physicists is that the child abuse experts have achieved their status as
- authorities not by scientific training but by either (a) experience [they
- were victims themselves or they have treated victims of abuse in their
- capacity as social workers] or (b) they wrote a book on child abuse. The
- child abuse experts are not trained in scientific research which is not a
- comment on their ability to write or to do therapy, but which does seem to
- be one reason for their scientific illiteracy. (Tavris, 1993)
-
- Here are a few of the unproved, unscientifically researched notions that
- are being bandied around by these child abuse experts: One, if you doubt
- that you were abused as a child or think that it might be your imagination,
- this is a sign of 'post-incest syndrome'. Two, if you can not remember any
- specific instances of being abused, but still have a feeling that something
- abusive happened to you, 'it probably did'. Three, when a person can not
- remember his or her childhood or have very fuzzy memories, 'incest must
- always be considered as a possibility'. And four, 'If you have any suspicion
- at all, if you have any memory, no matter how vague, it probably really
- happened. It is far more likely that you are blocking the memories, denying
- it happened'.
- There have been many symptoms suggested as indicators of past abuse. These
- symptoms range from headaches to irritable bowls. In fact, one psychologist
- compiled a list of over 900 different symptoms that had been presented as
- proof of a history of abuse. When he reviewed the professional literature,
- he found that not one of the symptoms could be shown to be an inclusive
- indication of a history of abuse. Given the lack of consistent scientific
- evidence, therapists must be careful in declaring that abuse has infact
- occurred. (London, 1995)
-
- Whole industries have been built up out of the hysteria that inevitably
- accompanies charges of the sexual abuse of children. Therapists who are
- supposed to help children recover from the trauma of the abuse are hired to
- interrogate the child, in order to find out if they have been abused. But
- all too often the therapist suggests the abuse to the child and the child
- has 'memories' of being abused, but no rational person should find a parent
- or caretaker guilty on the basis of such tainted testimony. [note 1]
-
- Increasingly throughout the continent, grown children under going
- therapeutic programs have come to believe that they suffer from "repressed
- memories" of incest and sexual abuse. While some reports of incest and
- sexual abuse are surely true, these decade delayed memories are too often
- the result of False Memory Syndrome caused by a disastrous "therapeutic"
- program. False Memory Syndrome has a devastating effect on the victim and
- typically produces a continuing dependency on the very program that creates
- the syndrome. False Memory Syndrome proceeds to destroy the psychological
- well being not only of the primary victim but through false accusations of
- incest and sexual abuse other members of the primary victim's family. The
- American Medical Association considers recovered memories of childhood
- sexual abuse to be of uncertain authenticity, which should be subject to
- external verification. The use of recovered memories is fraught with
- problems of potential misapplication.[note 2]
-
- The dangers of this model are apparent: not only are false memories treated
- as real memories, but real memories of real abuse may be treated as false
- memories and may provide real abusers with a believable defense. In the end,
- no one benefits from encouraging a belief in memory which is unfounded.
- Whatever the theory of memory one advocates, if it does not entail examining
- corroborating evidence and attempting to independently verify claims of
- recollected abuse, it is a theory which will cause more harm than good.
-
- Carl Jung, an early Freudian disciple and later heretic, extended this
- model of memory by adding another area of repressed memories to the
- unconscious mind, an area that was not based on individual past experiences
- at all: the "collective" unconscious. The collective unconscious is the
- repository for acts and mental patterns shared either by members of a
- culture or universally by all humans. Under certain conditions these
- manifest themselves as archetype: images, patterns and symbols, that are
- often seen in dreams or fantasies and that appear as themes in mythology,
- religion and fairy tales. The Archetype of the Archetype Model can be traced
- back to Plato's various beliefs about the eidos. (Forms of reality which
- were variously described by Plato but always were held up as 'more real'
- than the world of sense experience which, in some way, was always held up as
- inferior to and dependant on the eidos.)
-
-
- The Platonic Model avoids the problem of determining whether or not a
- memory is accurate by claiming that the memory is not of a personal
- experience at all. It also confuses several types of mental states. It
- completely blurs the distinction between dream states and conscious states
- by eliminating the difference between remembering a sense experience one
- actually had and remembering a sense experience one never actually had. This
- model gives validity to every fantasy and desire. If one is clever, though,
- one can destroy the first model with the second one. For example, a Jungian
- could claim that the repressed memories of all those who are now blaming
- their current troubles on forgotten and repressed memories of child abuse,
- are not memories of actual abuse but of an Archetype, the Abused Child
- Archetype. The story of Hansel and Gretel might be pulled in for
- "scientific" support of the idea. Unsupported assertions might be made
- regarding the unconscious desire of all children to be loved by their
- parents: as children, love could only be understood in terms of ego
- gratification, but as adults love is understood primarily in sexual terms.
- Because of the incest taboo, we can not bear the thought of wanting to be
- loved sexually by our parents, so this desire must be expressed in a
- perverse and inverse way: our parents love us sexually. But there is no
- evidence for this based upon our past or current relationship with our
- parents, so the mind creates the evidence by remembering being sexually
- abused as a child. Thus, the memory we have as adults of being sexually
- abused by our parents is actually the expression of the universal desire to
- be loved by our mother and father. It has nothing to do with any real
- experience; it has everything to do with a universal human desire. It also
- serves as a convenient excuse to absolve us of all responsibility for our
- failures and incompetence. The reason we are so screwed up is because our
- parents screwed us!
-
- How accurate and reliable is memory? We're often wrong in thinking we
- accurately remember things. Studies on memory have shown that we often
- construct our memories after the fact, that we are susceptible to
- suggestions from others that help us fill in the gaps in our memories of
- certain events. (Hyman, Jr., Husband & Billings, 1995) That is why, for
- example, a police officer investigating a crime should not show a picture of
- a single individual to a victim and ask if the victim recognizes the
- assailant. If the victim is then presented a line up and picks out the
- individual whose picture the victim had been shown, there is no way of
- knowing whether the victim is remembering the assailant or the picture.
-
- Another interesting fact about memory is that studies have shown that there
- is no significant correlation between the subjective feeling of certainty a
- person has about memory and that memory being accurate. Also, contrary to
- what many believe, hypnosis does not aid memory's accuracy because subjects
- are extremely suggestible while under hypnosis. (Loftus, 1980) It is
- possible to create false memories in people's minds by suggestion.
-
- The mind does not record every detail of an event, but only a few features;
- we fill in the rest on what "must have been." For an event to make it to
- long term storage, a person has to perceive it, encode it and rehearse it
- --tell about it-- or it decays. (This seems to be the major mechanism behind
- childhood amnesia, the fact that children do not develop long term memory
- until roughly age three.) Otherwise, research finds, even emotional
- experiences we are sure we will never forget --the Kennedy assassination,
- the Challenger explosion-- will fade from memory, and errors will creep into
- the account that remain.(Travis, 1993)
-
- Research articles and court testimony confirm the wide spread use of memory
- enhancement techniques, in the belief that these will help recover accurate
- "memories". These techniques include hypnosis, sodium amytal, dream
- interpretation, guided imagery, journaling, body massages, participation in
- survivor groups and reading of self help books. In the summer of 1993, the
- American Medical Association passed a resolution warning of the dangers of
- misapplication in the use of these techniques. In June of 1994 they issued a
- warning about all recovered memories. Both the AMA and the American
- Psychiatric Association have stated:
-
- ..there is no completely accurate way of determining the validity of reports
- in the absence of corroborating information.[note 3]
-
- The problem with the practices mentioned above is that when they are used
- they increase the risk of influence and suggestibility.
-
- Why would someone remember something so horrible if it really did not
- happen? This is a haunting question, but there are several possible
- explanations which might shed light on some of the false memories. A
- pseudomemory, for example, may be a kind of symbolic expression of troubled
- family relationships. There may be a cultural climate in our society in
- which the belief in the relationship between sexual abuse and individual
- pathology is nurtured. It may be that in such a climate people more readily
- believe things happened when they didn't. When people enter therapy, they do
- so to get better. They want to change. People also tend to look for some
- explanation for why they have a problem. Clients come to trust the person
- they have chosen to help them. Because they are trying to get better,
- clients tend to rely on the therapist's opinion. If the therapist believes
- that the reason that the client has a problem is because of some past
- trauma, and especially if the therapist believes that the patient will not
- get better unless he or she remembers the trauma, the patient will work to
- find what he or she thinks is a trauma memory in order to get better.
- Richard Ofshe, Ph.D. and Ethan Watters noted that, "No one -- not the
- patients, therapists, parents or critics of recovered memory therapy --
- question that this therapy is an intensely difficult and painful experience.
- That the pain of therapy is real should not be accepted, however, as an
- argument that the memories uncovered are accurate. One's emotional reaction
- to a perceived memory need not correlate with the veracity of that event,
- but rather only to whether one believes that event to be true."[note 4]
-
- Therapists may believe that they are helping clients and improving a
- culture in which sex abuse is far too prevalent. A patient may find group
- acceptance in the cadre of survivors and find "the" reason for problems.
- Patients suffering from severe psychological symptoms are known to engage in
- what is called, "effort after meaning" (Bass & Davis, 1988), in that they
- seek some explanation, however remote, for suffering.
-
- So, should accounts of repressed memory be dismissed out of hand? Of course
- not! But there should be an attempt to corroborate such memories with
- independent evidence and testimony before drawing conclusions about actual
- abuses or crimes. Such accounts should be taken very seriously and should be
- critically examined, giving them all the attention and investigative
- analysis we would give to any allegation of crime. But we should not rush to
- judgement, either about the accuracy of the memories of about the causal
- connection between past experiences and present problems. We should neither
- automatically reject as false memories which have been repressed for years
- and are suddenly recollected, nor should we automatically accept such
- memories as true. In terms of verification of their accuracy, these memories
- should not be treated any differently than any other type of memory.
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- NOTES
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- 1. Yet, it has happened. In a modern version of the Salem witch hunts, the
- McMartin pre-school case exemplifies the very worst in institutionalized
- justice on the hunt for child molesters.
-
- See, Mason, M. (Sept. 1991). The McMartin case revisited: the conflict
- between social work and criminal justice, Social Work, v.36, no.5.
- 391-396. [on evaluating the credibility of children as witnesses in sexual
- abuse cases] ,
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- 2. See, Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical
- Association, June 16.
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- 3. See, Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical
- Association, June 16.
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- 4. See, Ofshe, R., & Watters, E., (1994). Making Monsters: False Memory,
- Psychotherapy and Sexual Hysteria. p.109.
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- REFERENCES
-
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- Bass, E. & Davis, L., (1988). The Courage To Heal, p.173.
-
- Council on Scientific Affairs, (1994). American Medical Association, June 16.
-
- Hyman, I.E. Jr., Husband, T.H. & Billings, F.J., (1995). Prompting false
- childhood memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 9, pp.181-197.
-
- Lindsay, S. & Read, D., (1994). Applied Cognitive Psychology, 8, p.302.
-
- London., (1995). Independent Practitioner, March 1, 64.
-
- Loftus, E., (1980). Memory, Surprising New Insights Into How We Remember
- and Why We Forget, Reading, Mass,: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co.
-
- Loftus, E., & Ketcham, K., (1987). Eye Witness Testimony: Civil and
- Criminal, New York, N.Y.: Kluwer Law Book Publishers.
-
- Loftus, E., (1980). Eye Witness Testimony, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
- University Press.
-
- Mason, M., (Sept. 1991). The McMartin case revisited: the conflict between
- social work and criminal justice," Social Work, 36, no. 5, pp.391-396.
-
- Ofshe, R., & Watters, E., (1994). Making Monsters: False Memory,
- Psychotherapy and Sexual Hysteria. p.109.
-
- Tavris, C., (1993). Hysteria and the Incest Survivor Machine, Sacramento
- Bee, Forum section, January 17, p.1.
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