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Elizabeth F Loftus

Showing results (31-40 of 87) with videos related to

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Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications|July 23, 2021
Nevertheless, partisanship persisted: fake news warnings help briefly, but bias returns with timeRebecca Hofstein Grady, Peter H Ditto, Elizabeth F Loftus
University of Richmond Law Review. University of Richmond|January 1, 1996
Patient-psychotherapist privilege: access to clinical records in the tangled web of repressed memory litigationElizabeth F Loftus, John R Paddock, Thomas F Guernsey
Learning & Memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.)|September 24, 2010
Imaging the reconstruction of true and false memories using sensory reactivation and the misinformation paradigmsCraig E L Stark, Yoko Okado, Elizabeth F Loftus
Memory & Cognition|June 14, 2002
Increasing confidence in remote autobiographical memory and general knowledge: extensions of the revelation effectDaniel M Bernstein, Bruce W A Whittlesea, Elizabeth F Loftus
Memory & Cognition|August 29, 2006
Ripple effects in memory: judgments of moral blame can distort memory for eventsDavid A Pizarro, Cara Laney, Erin K Morris, et al.
Memory (Hove, England)|December 28, 2020
The messy landscape of eye movements and false memoriesJillian M Kenchel, Kirsten Domagalski, Brendon Jerome Butler, et al.
Memory & Cognition|February 12, 2013
The relationship between DRM and misinformation false memoriesBi Zhu, Chuansheng Chen, Elizabeth F Loftus, et al.
Nature Communications|April 21, 2023
Cross-stage neural pattern similarity in the hippocampus predicts false memory derived from post-event inaccurate informationXuhao Shao, Ao Li, Chuansheng Chen, et al.
Memory (Hove, England)|November 14, 2025
Who believes in repressed memories? The roles of gender, age, and education in a national sample of United States adultsRiley B Grady, Quincy C Miller, Kamala London, et al.
The American Journal of Psychology|July 18, 2006
Susceptibility to memory distortion: how do we decide it has occurred?Erin K Morris, Cara Laney, Daniel M Bernstein, et al.
Pageof 9

Showing results (31-40 of 87) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 9
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications|July 23, 2021
Nevertheless, partisanship persisted: fake news warnings help briefly, but bias returns with timeRebecca Hofstein Grady, Peter H Ditto, Elizabeth F Loftus
University of Richmond Law Review. University of Richmond|January 1, 1996
Patient-psychotherapist privilege: access to clinical records in the tangled web of repressed memory litigationElizabeth F Loftus, John R Paddock, Thomas F Guernsey
Learning & Memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.)|September 24, 2010
Imaging the reconstruction of true and false memories using sensory reactivation and the misinformation paradigmsCraig E L Stark, Yoko Okado, Elizabeth F Loftus
Memory & Cognition|June 14, 2002
Increasing confidence in remote autobiographical memory and general knowledge: extensions of the revelation effectDaniel M Bernstein, Bruce W A Whittlesea, Elizabeth F Loftus
Memory & Cognition|August 29, 2006
Ripple effects in memory: judgments of moral blame can distort memory for eventsDavid A Pizarro, Cara Laney, Erin K Morris, et al.
Memory (Hove, England)|December 28, 2020
The messy landscape of eye movements and false memoriesJillian M Kenchel, Kirsten Domagalski, Brendon Jerome Butler, et al.
Memory & Cognition|February 12, 2013
The relationship between DRM and misinformation false memoriesBi Zhu, Chuansheng Chen, Elizabeth F Loftus, et al.
Nature Communications|April 21, 2023
Cross-stage neural pattern similarity in the hippocampus predicts false memory derived from post-event inaccurate informationXuhao Shao, Ao Li, Chuansheng Chen, et al.
Memory (Hove, England)|November 14, 2025
Who believes in repressed memories? The roles of gender, age, and education in a national sample of United States adultsRiley B Grady, Quincy C Miller, Kamala London, et al.
The American Journal of Psychology|July 18, 2006
Susceptibility to memory distortion: how do we decide it has occurred?Erin K Morris, Cara Laney, Daniel M Bernstein, et al.
Pageof 9