Members in the Media
From: Scientific American

Video Evidence and Eye Witness Accounts: Why People See Different things

When someone retrieves a memory, they “aren’t playing a recording back,” explains Elizabeth Loftus, a psychology professor at the University of California, Irvine. Rather “we are constructing” that memory, she says. In other words, the brain collects bits and pieces of information, sometimes from different times and places, and forges them into a memory. “Once that happens, it’s not easy to separate out what piece came from where,” Loftus adds.

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