Belief in Unconscious Repressed Memory Persists

Author:

Otgaar Henry123ORCID,Howe Mark L.12,Dodier Olivier4ORCID,Lilienfeld Scott O.5ORCID,Loftus Elizabeth F.6,Lynn Steven Jay7,Merckelbach Harald1ORCID,Patihis Lawrence8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Section of Forensic Psychology, Maastricht University

2. Department of Psychology, City, University of London

3. Leuvens Institute for Criminology, Faculty of Law, KU Leuven

4. Department of Psychology, University of Nantes, France

5. Department of Psychology, Emory University

6. Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine

7. Laboratory of Consciousness, Cognition, and Psychopathology, Binghamton University

8. Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth

Abstract

On the basis of converging research, we concluded that the controversial topic of unconscious blockage of psychological trauma (i.e., repressed memory) remains very much alive in clinical, legal, and academic contexts. In his commentary, Brewin (this issue, p. 443) conducted a cocitation analysis and concluded that scholars do not adhere to the concept of unconscious repression. Furthermore, he argued that previous survey research did not specifically assess unconscious repression. Here, we present critical evidence that runs counter to his claims. First, we inspected his cocitation analysis and found that some scholars support notions that are closely related to unconscious repression. Furthermore, we conducted another analysis on the basis of articles’ similarity. Again, we found examples of scholars specifically endorsing unconscious repressed memories. Second, as opposed to what Brewin reports, recent survey research now exists that bears directly on people’s beliefs regarding unconscious repression. This work reveals that large percentages of people (e.g., students and eye-movement desensitization and reprocessing [EMDR] clinicians) endorse the concept of unconscious repressed memories. The belief in unconscious repressed memory can continue to contribute to harmful consequences in clinical, legal, and academic domains (e.g., false accusations of abuse).

Funder

C1 Grant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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