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The Misinformation Effect

How Post-Event Information Rewrites Your Memory

Loftus & Palmer, 1974

The Classic Experiment

In 1974, Elizabeth Loftus and John Palmer showed participants a film of a car accident. Then they asked a simple question—but the wording changed everything.

The Question: "About how fast were the cars going when they _____ each other?"

Different participants received different verbs: smashed, collided, bumped, hit, or contacted.
45
Participants per group
9 mph
Difference in estimates
2x
More false memories with "smashed"

Experience It Yourself

Watch the accident, then answer the question. Your verb will be randomly assigned.

Accident Scene

Now answer this question:

"About how fast were the cars going when they each other?"

mph

Your Estimate vs. Original Study Results

The SAME accident footage produced different estimates based on verb alone:

"Smashed"
40.8 mph
"Collided"
39.3 mph
"Bumped"
38.1 mph
"Hit"
34.0 mph
"Contacted"
31.8 mph
Your estimate
mph

One Week Later...

Loftus brought participants back and asked a new question:

"Did you see any broken glass?"

(There was NO broken glass in the video)

The Power of Leading Questions

The word "smashed" didn't just affect speed estimates—it created false memories!

32%
"Smashed" group
falsely remembered glass
14%
"Hit" group
falsely remembered glass

How Memory Gets Overwritten

Your memory isn't a video recorder—it's more like a Wikipedia page that anyone can edit.

1. Original Event

You witness a car accident. Your brain encodes visual details, sounds, and emotions into a memory trace.

2. Post-Event Information

Someone asks "How fast were they going when they SMASHED?" The violent verb activates schemas of high-speed crashes.

3. Memory Integration

Your brain doesn't distinguish original memory from post-event suggestions. They merge into a single "memory."

4. False Recall

When asked later, you confidently "remember" broken glass, higher speeds, and violence that never occurred.

The "Lost in the Mall" Study (1995)

Loftus went further: could you implant an entirely fabricated childhood memory?

Method: Researchers told adults about four childhood events—three real (from family members), one completely fake: being lost in a shopping mall.

Result: 25-30% of participants developed complete false memories of being lost, adding rich sensory details that never happened!
25-30%
Created false memories
24
Participants tested
2
Interview sessions

Participants would say things like: "I remember the old lady who helped me... she was wearing a blue flannel shirt." None of this happened.

Real-World Consequences

Eyewitness Testimony

Leading questions from police or lawyers can permanently alter witnesses' memories. The Innocence Project found eyewitness misidentification in 69% of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA.

Therapy & False Memories

Suggestive therapeutic techniques in the 1980s-90s created thousands of false "recovered memories" of childhood abuse that never occurred, destroying innocent families.

News Media

Dramatic news coverage can reshape memories. After 9/11, many Americans "remembered" seeing the first plane hit live on TV—but that footage didn't air until the next day.

Marketing & Advertising

Companies can implant "memories" of positive brand experiences. Participants who saw doctored photos of themselves at Disneyland later "remembered" meeting Bugs Bunny there—impossible, since Bugs is a Warner Bros. character.

Protecting Your Memories

📝

Record Immediately

Write down memories as soon as possible after an event, before post-event information can contaminate them.

🔎

Question the Source

Ask yourself: "Did I actually see this, or did someone tell me about it?" Distinguish between experienced and acquired memories.

🚫

Avoid Leading Questions

When discussing memories with others, use neutral language. "What happened?" is better than "How scary was it when...?"

🧠

Accept Memory Fallibility

Recognize that confident, vivid memories can still be wrong. Confidence is not correlated with accuracy.

The Unsettling Truth

Your memories are not recordings—they are reconstructions. Every time you recall an event, you rewrite it slightly. Other people's words, questions, and suggestions become woven into your personal history until you can no longer tell the difference between what you experienced and what you were told.


"Memory is the diary we all carry about with us—and anyone can write in it."