Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire There may be no single, simple explanation for reports of recovered
memories of childhood sexual abuse. Witness the first evidence that
people who report such recall display either of two cognitive profiles,
one signaling a susceptibility to retrieving false memories and the
other a tendency to have forgotten earlier recollections of actual
abuse.
Members of the first group typically salvage child sex-abuse
memories gradually via psychotherapy that includes hypnosis and other
suggestive techniques, say psychologist Elke Geraerts of the University
of St. Andrews, Scotland, and her colleagues. Those in the second group
suddenly recover memories of abuse, due to unexpected reminders of what
happened, the researchers assert in the January Psychological Science.
The new research is based on the results of memory tests taken by
120 middle-aged volunteers, mostly women. The work reveals that
different ways of remembering and forgetting correspond to how people
recover memories of child abuse.
Spontaneous recall of actual childhood sexual abuse often produces
an illusion of not having remembered those events earlier, Geraerts
contends. Her team refers to this phenomenon, which hinges on having
recalled the same event in different contexts, as the
forgot-it-all-along effect. http://www.myspace.com/louis_j_sheehan_esquire
Psychologist and study coauthor Jonathan Schooler of the University
of California, Santa Barbara, has documented real-life instances of the
forgot-it-all-along effect. One woman, when asked to attend a talk on
child molestation, suddenly remembered having been fondled by a family
friend while on vacation at age 9. The woman believed that she hadn’t
recalled the abuse for decades. But her former husband reported that
she had told him about the incident on several occasions, always in an
unemotional tone. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
“The purpose of my research is to reconcile both sides in the
recovered-memory debate,” Geraerts says. One side holds that memories
of childhood sexual abuse are blotted out of consciousness, or
repressed, because they’re too traumatic and can be recalled only many
years later. An opposing view contends that many recovered-memory
reports are falsehoods, often inadvertently fostered by
psychotherapists.
Geraerts proposes a third option: Depending on the context in which
they’re retrieved, recovered memories are either false or portray
actual abuse that had already been remembered and forgotten.
“These data show how people who were sexually abused as children may
later recover their memories of abuse without the memories previously
having been repressed,” remarks Harvard University psychologist Richard
McNally.
Contrary to McNally’s view, the forgot-it-all-along effect does in
fact illustrate a type of repression, one in which a person submerges
overwhelming feelings linked to a traumatic memory, at least until
prompted by the right cue, Stanford University psychiatrist David
Spiegel suggests. The memory is there, but not fully experienced. “I’d
bet that emotional-memory recovery improves recall for the content of
an abusive experience,” Spiegel says.
Geraerts can’t rule out that some psychotherapy patients in her
study recovered memories of actual child abuse and that some
spontaneously recovered memories that were false, notes psychologist
Kathy Pezdek of Claremont Graduate University in Calif. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire “It’s
surprising that there were still big differences in the cognitive
profiles of the psychotherapy and spontaneous recovery groups,” she
says.
Among the volunteers Geraerts and her coworkers recruited, equal
numbers reported one of four scenarios: that they had spontaneously
recovered child sex- abuse memories outside of psychotherapy, that they
had gradually reclaimed such memories with a psychotherapist’s
assistance, that they had never forgotten having been sexually abused
during childhood or that they had never been abused.
Volunteers first completed a false-memory test. They studied word lists, each containing related words such as bed, rest and tired. On subsequent trials, everyone tended to recall falsely that new but related words, such as sleep,
had been on the first lists. But people who had recovered child sex
abuse memories in psychotherapy made such mistakes far more often than
did members of the other three groups.
Geraerts says this finding indicates that memories gradually
recovered during psychotherapy should be treated cautiously, even if
the data say nothing about the accuracy of any individual’s recovered
memory.
Spiegel cautions that people quickly derive the gist of related
words and use that knowledge to guide recall on the false-memory test.
The volunteers’ mistakes reflect accurate gist knowledge, so such
responses don’t correspond to false memories of abuse, in his view.
Participants in Geraerts’ study also performed a test that measured
their tendency to forget what they had just remembered. Volunteers
studied target words, such as palm, each accompanied by a related word, such as hand.
An initial memory trial required recall of partial target words, say
p**m, paired with the initial related word or another related word,
such as tree. http://www.myspace.com/louis_j_sheehan_esquire A second memory trial presented partial target
words paired only with original related words. Volunteers then reported
whether target words that they recalled on the second trial were words
they had also recalled on the first trial.
Only the group that had spontaneously recovered memories of child
sex abuse frequently forgot that they had already recalled words that
had been paired with new words. Similarly, members of this group may
have forgotten earlier recollections of actual abuse because those
recollections occurred in different contexts, Geraerts suggests.
Because many such individuals are abused at an early age by people
they know and trust, the abuse is initially recalled as weird and
confusing, she posits. The same abuse gets interpreted as traumatic and
sexual only after reminders in adulthood spark spontaneous recall.
Spiegel disagrees. Sexual abuse by a family member or friend is
experienced as highly traumatic by young kids because it threatens
their sense of safety, can’t be easily classified and is considered by
children to be their own fault, he asserts.
In other studies, Geraerts’ team has found that people with
spontaneously recovered memories of child sex abuse are particularly
good at willing away thoughts about unpleasant personal experiences and
often fail to notice when distressing thoughts pop into awareness.
Found in: Humans and Psychology