Much of the research on false recall has focused on long-term memory with an emphasis on childhood events that happened long ago, but scientists in the Netherlands, England and Canada conducted an extensive experiment to take a closer look at the potential fallacy of short-term memory.
The human brain has trouble remembering even seconds ago
In the study published in PLOS One, the test results of hundreds of volunteers are presented. During the four experiments, the volunteers were shown a series of letters and asked to remember the highlighted letter. In addition, some of the highlighted letters were mirrored upside down and volunteers were asked to remember this as well.
Lead author Marte Otten, a neuroscientist at the University of Amsterdam, said: “This study is unique to us in two respects. First, it explores memory for events that took place 0.3 to 3 seconds ago. Intuitively, we think these memories are quite reliable. Second, as a unique feature.” , we openly asked people if they thought their memories were reliable—that is, how sure are they of their answers?”
According to Marte Otten, the published findings show that our memory begins to be shaped by our biases almost instantly. On the other hand, it is reported that short-term memory should be tested in different ways for the accuracy of the study. Letters are the things we have been accustomed to since our childhood and most of the time we do not have a judgment against letters. According to Otten, short-term memory needs to be investigated and to what extent the judgments shape the memory should be examined on subjects where we have judgments such as voices, human faces and facial expressions.