-Caveat Lector-

Hi !

Below please find information on possible uses of propaganda by the FMSF and
peer reviewed studies showing the prevalence of recovered memory and low
suggestibilty rates of recovered memory patients.

Sincerely,  Neil Brick

from  http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Taubman_Center/Recovmem/Archive.html

The Recovered Memory Project is an Internet-based research project, directed
by Professor Ross E. Cheit of the Taubman Center for Public Policy and
American Institutions at Brown University. This project began as a letter to
PBS objecting to false statements and shoddy research by Ofra Bikel, producer
of the program "Divided Memories." (Journalists note: Bikel's program was
later described in the Columbia Journalism Review as "a four-hour polemic"
that only "purported to be balanced." ) This page was launched in conjunction
with a presentation at the American Psychological Association meetings in
Chicago, August 18, 1997. For a more detailed discussion of the criteria for
including cases in the archive, along with some reflections on the science
and politics of recovered memory, see Ross E. Cheit, "Consider This, Skeptics
of Recovered Memory," Ethics and Behavior, 8(2), 141-160 (1998). This site
will be updated regularly with additional cases and information.

The Archive
•Background
•66 Corroborated Cases of Recovered Memory
•33 Cases from Legal Proceedings •
Overview: All of the cases in this file involve claims in legal proceedings.
Some cases are criminal, some are civil, and a few are administrative or
involve an estate. The criminal cases all resulted in either a guilty verdict
or a guilty plea. The civil cases all resulted in either a civil judgment or
a civil settlement. The cases included pre-trial discovery on the facts, and
often full-blown adjudication. In short, the corroboration in these cases has
been scrutinized and in many cases verified through a legal proceeding.
15 Clinical Cases and other Academic/Scientific Case Studies •18 Other
Corroborated Cases of Recovered Memory
•Criteria to Submit a Case to the Archive
•Full-text articles, abstracts, and data tables on recovered memories, memory
research, malpractice, ethics, and related topics.
•22 Peer-Reviewed Studies About Amnesia and Child Abuse
•24 Publications on Traumatic Amnesia in Holocaust Survivors
•Other Scientific Research & Scholarly Resources


from http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Taubman_Center/Recovmem/Archive.html

Memory, Abuse, and Science: Questioning Claims about the False Memory
Syndrome Epidemic is the award address for the American Psychological
Association's Award for Distinguished Contributions to Public Service
delivered at the 103rd Annual Convention of the American Psychological
Association, New York, NY. August 1995. An audiotape of this talk (audiotape
No. APA9S-245) may be ordered from from Sound Images, Aurora, CO; telephone:
303-649-1811).

An adapted version of the address that appears below was published in
American Psychologist, September, 1996, vol. 51, no. 9, pages 957-974

Use of Holocaust imagery.
Those who disagree with FMSF have also been compared to Fascists. In her book
Diagnosis for Disaster: The Devastating Truth About False Memory Syndrome and
Its Impact on Accusers and Families , Wassil-Grimm (1995) , for example, used
the imagery of the Holocaust, explicitly referring to Hitler and the Jews:
"Hitler had the Jews; McCarthy had the communists; radical feminists have
perpetrators" (p. 91). The Oregonian quoted the FMSF Executive Director
Pamela Freyd as describing the behavior of professor Jennifer Freyd as
"Gestapolike" (Mitchell, 1993, p. L6 ), a term she had previously used in a
journal article, later reprinted as a book chapter (Doe, 1994, p. 29). (In
late February 1992, when she wrote that she was "going to serve as Executive
Director of the FMS foundation, " Pamela Freyd confirmed in the False Memory
Syndrome Newsletter that "You already know me as Jane Doe".) Another use of
imagery related to the Holocaust, used on this occasion to compare an FMSF
Scientific and Professional Advisory Board member to those who risked their
lives to save Jews from the Nazis, appeared in the Boston Globe: " 'I feel
like Oskar Schindler, ' Loftus muses, referring to the German financier who
rescued doomed Jews from the Nazis. 'There is this desperate drive to work as
fast as I can'" (Kahn, 1994, p. 80).

It is important to examine the use of imagery related to the Holocaust to
compare explicitly or implicitly one who disagrees to Hitler, the Gestapo,
and Nazis or to portray an FMSF proponent as engaged in a desperate rescue.
Among questions to be addressed in careful examination of this use are the
following: Do such statements reflect on the motivation, character, and
decency of those who disagree with FMSF claims? Do such statements promote a
climate of hate and hostility toward those who fail to accept FMSF claims? Do
such statements have a chilling effect on some who otherwise might voice
questions about FMSF claims? How might such statements affect the scientific
and popular (e.g., media) evaluation of FMSF claims about the difficult and
complex issues of remembering child sex abuse?

If patients currently seeking legal health care services from those who
question or disagree with FMSF are forced to cross picket lines to obtain
those services or if they are subjected to other interventions, it may
unduly, unfairly, and detrimentally influence their rights to choice and
their rights to treatment.

http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Taubman_Center/Recovmem/Archive.html

Peer-Reviewed Studies About Amnesia and Child Abuse

The recovery of memories in clinical practice: Experiences and beliefs of
British Psychological Society practitioners Andrews, Bernice; Morton, John;
Bekerian, Debra A.; Brewin, Chris R.; Davis, Graham M.; Mollon, Phil   The
Psychologist
1995 May, Vol. 8, pp. 209-214 This article does not have a traditional
abstract, so I have selected a few quotes from the article, including the
author note. "The authors were members of the Society's Working Party on
Recovered Memories. In February the Society published the Working Party's
report. Here the results of the survey, which formed a part of the report,
are published in full." "The findings suggest that. . .recovery from total
amnesia of past traumatic material involving both CSA and non-CSA experiences
is by no means an uncommon feature of clinical practice among our highly
trained professional members." ". . .our large-scale survey confirms and
extends previous research. . . . Memory recovery appears to be a robust and
frequent phenomenon."

Accuracy, timing and circumstances of disclosure in therapy of recovered and
continuous memories of abuse. Dalenberg, Constance J.   CSPP, Trauma Research
Inst, San Diego, CA, US
Journal of Psychiatry & Law
1996 Sum Vol 24(2) 229-275 Investigated the accuracy of recovered and
continuous memories in 17 women (average age 29.5 yrs) who had recovered
memories of physical or sexual abuse by their fathers while in therapy. Ss
and their 43-72 yr old fathers cooperated in gathering physical evidence
confirming or refuting these memories. This evidence was analyzed and rated
by 6 independent judges recruited for the purpose. Memories of abuse were
found to be equally accurate whether recovered or continuously remembered.
Predictors of number of memory units for which evidence was uncovered
included several measures of memory and perceptual accuracy. Recovered
memories that were later supported arose in psychotherapy more typically
during periods of positive rather than negative feeling toward the therapist,
and they were more likely to be held with confidence by the abuse victim.

Traumatic events: Prevalence and delayed recall in the general population
Elliott, Diana M.   U California-Los Angeles Medical Ctr, Child Abuse Crisis
Ctr, Harbor Campus, Torrance, US Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
1997 Vol 65, 811-820 A random sample of 724 individuals from across the
United States were mailed a questionnaire containing demographic information,
an abridged version of the Traumatic Events Survey (DM Elliott, 1992), and
questions regarding memory for traumatic events. Of these, 505 (70%)
completed the survey. Among respondents who reported some form of trauma
(72%), delayed recall of the event was reported by 32%. This phenomenon was
most common among individuals who observed the murder or suicide of a family
member, sexual abuse survivors, and combat veterans. The severity of the
trauma was predictive of memory status, but demographic variables were not.
The most commonly reported trigger to recall of the trauma was some form of
media presentation (i.e., television show, movie), whereas psychotherapy was
the least commonly reported trigger

The experience of "forgetting" childhood abuse: A national survey of
psychologists. Feldman-Summers, Shirley; Pope, Kenneth S.   Independent
practice, Edmonds, WA, US
Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology
1994 Jun Vol 62(3) 636-639 A national sample of psychologists were asked
whether they had been abused as children and, if so, whether they had ever
forgotten some or all of the abuse. Almost a quarter of the sample (23.9%)
reported childhood abuse, and of those, approximately 40% reported a period
of forgetting some or all of the abuse. The major findings were that (1) both
sexual and nonsexual abuse were subject to periods of forgetting; (2) the
most frequently reported factor related to recall was being in therapy; (3)
approximately one half of those who reported forgetting also reported
corroboration of the abuse [see comparable percentage in the Pope &
Tabachnick (1995) study below]; and (4) reported forgetting was not related
to gender or age of the respondent but was related to severity of the abuse.

Recovery and verification of memories of childhood sexual trauma. Herman,
Judith L.; Schatzow, Emily   Women's Mental Health Collective, Somerville, MA
Psychoanalytic Psychology
1987 Win Vol 4(1) 1-14 53 women outpatients (aged 15-53 yrs) participated in
short-term therapy groups for incest survivors. This treatment modality
proved to be a powerful stimulus for recovery of previously repressed
traumatic memories. A relationship was observed between the age of onset,
duration, and degree of violence of the abuse and the extent to which memory
of the abuse had been repressed. 74% of Ss were able to validate their
memories by obtaining corroborating evidence from other sources. The
therapeutic function of recovering and validating traumatic memories is
explored in relation to case material.

False attribution of suggestibility to explain recovered memory of childhood
sexual abuse following extended amnesia. Leavitt, Frank   Department of
Psychology & Social Sciences, Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL
Child Abuse & Neglect
1997, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 265-272 Suggestibility is central to arguments
proffered by critics of recovered memory of childhood sexual abuse who
believe that memories involving amnesia are false creations by treatment. The
present study represents the first direct investigation of suggestibility
among patients who report recovered memory. Suggestibility was measured in 44
patients who recovered memories and in 31 patient comparison group without a
history of sexual trauma using the Gudjonsson Suggestibility Scale. Results
indicate that patients who recover memories were remarkably less suggestible
than the clinical field has been led to believe by advocates of false memory.
As a group, they scored low on suggestibility. Recovered Memory patients
yielded to suggested prompts an average of 6.7 times per case. This compares
to an average of 10.6 in the Psychiatric comparison group. Paradoxically,
patients without a history of sex abuse were more at risk for altering memory
to suggestive prompts. These findings appreciably challenge advocated
theories of suggested memory.

Recovered memories of abuse among therapy patients: A national survey. Pope,
Kenneth S.; Tabachnick, Barbara G.   Independent practice, Norwalk, CT, US
Ethics & Behavior
1995 Vol 5(3) 237-248 A survey of 205 female and 173 male psychologists found
that 73% of them had had at least 1 patient who claimed to recover previously
forgotten memories of childhood sex abuse. There were gender differences
regarding patients who claim to have recovered memories of abuse. Patients
who are alleged to have sexually abused a child who recovered memories of the
abuse after a period of being unable to remember it do not show such
differences except that 3 times as many men were reported to have been the
object of a civil or criminal complaint on the basis of the recovered memory.
Data suggest that when recovered memories seem to implicate male and female
patients as perpetrators or victims of childhood sex abuse, therapist's
gender is a significant variable only for women patients who recover memories
of having been abused. Therapists' theoretical orientation was not relevant.
[Note: In this study, the therapists reported 2,452 patients (out of a total
of 273,785 whom they had treated over the course of their career) who
reported recovering memories of childhood abuse. This represents about 8 or 9
patients out of every 1,000. According to the therapists, about 50% of the
the patients who claimed to have recovered the memories had found external
validation, a percentage that coincides with that obtained in the
Feldman-Summers & Pope, 1994 study.]

Recall of childhood trauma: A prospective study of women's memories of child
sexual abuse. Williams, Linda Meyer   U New Hampshire, Family Research Lab,
Durham, US
Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology
1994 Dec Vol 62(6) 1167-1176 One hundred twenty-nine women with previously
documented histories of sexual victimization in childhood were interviewed
and asked detailed questions about their abuse histories to answer the
question "Do people actually forget traumatic events such as child sexual
abuse, and if so, how common is such forgetting?" A large proportion of the
women (38%) did not recall the abuse that had been reported 17 years earlier.
Women who were younger at the time of the abuse and those who were molested
by someone they knew were more likely to have no recall of the abuse. The
implications for research and practice are discussed. Long periods with no
memory of abuse should not be regarded as evidence that the abuse did not
occur.

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