Maryanne Garry
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New Zealand educational psychology academic
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Maryanne Garrypsychology Degrees
Psychology
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Educational Psychology
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#144
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Psychology
Maryanne Garry's Degrees
- Bachelors Psychology University of New Zealand
- Masters Psychology University of New Zealand
- PhD Psychology University of New Zealand
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Maryanne Connell-Covello Garry is a New Zealand educational psychology academic. As of mid-2018, she is a full professor at the University of Waikato. Garry is a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science.
Maryanne Garry's Published Works
Published Works
- Imagination inflation: Imagining a childhood event inflates confidence that it occurred (1996) (543)
- A picture is worth a thousand lies: Using false photographs to create false childhood memories (2002) (348)
- True Photographs and False Memories (2004) (239)
- Registered Replication Report (2014) (151)
- Imagination and Memory (2000) (139)
- Forgetting sexual trauma: what does it mean when 38% forget? (1994) (132)
- Actually, a picture is worth less than 45 words: Narratives produce more false memories than photographs do (2005) (116)
- You say tomato? Collaborative remembering leads to more false memories for intimate couples than for strangers (2008) (109)
- The trauma model of dissociation: inconvenient truths and stubborn fictions. Comment on Dalenberg et al. (2012). (2014) (101)
- Nonprobative photographs (or words) inflate truthiness (2012) (100)
- On the (non)persuasive power of a brain image (2013) (92)
- Absolut® Memory Distortions (2003) (92)
- When Photographs Create False Memories (2005) (79)
- False claims about false memory research (2007) (79)
- Suggestion, Cognition, and Behavior (2012) (75)
- Do justice and let the sky fall : Elizabeth F. Loftus and her contributions to science, law, and academic freedom (2006) (72)
- Modernising the misinformation effect: the development of a new stimulus set (2006) (71)
- Relative - not absolute - judgments of credibility affect susceptibility to misinformation conveyed during discussion. (2011) (61)
- Eyewitness memory following discussion: using the MORI technique with a Western sample (2008) (58)
- The power of the spoken word: Sociolinguistic cues influence the misinformation effect (2003) (56)
- A sham drug improves a demanding prospective memory task (2011) (55)
- Individual differences in working memory capacity affect false memories for missing aspects of events (2007) (55)
- Repetition, not number of sources, increases both susceptibility to misinformation and confidence in the accuracy of eyewitnesses. (2012) (54)
- Dear diary, is plastic better than paper? I can't remember: Comment on Green, Rafaeli, Bolger, Shrout, and Reis (2006). (2006) (48)
- Memory: A River Runs through It (1994) (46)
- Event plausibility does not determine children's false memories (2006) (46)
- Drawing out children's false memories (2003) (46)
- Examining memory for heterosexual college students' sexual experiences using an electronic mail diary. (2002) (45)
- Photographs can distort memory for the news. (2007) (42)
- Truthiness and falsiness of trivia claims depend on judgmental contexts. (2015) (42)
- 'Mind the gap': false memories for missing aspects of an event (2006) (41)
- Imagination or exposure causes imagination inflation. (2004) (40)
- A photo, a suggestion, a false memory (2008) (39)
- Strategies for verifying false autobiographical memories. (2005) (38)
- Pseudomemories without hypnosis. (1994) (37)
- People with Easier to Pronounce Names Promote Truthiness of Claims (2014) (37)
- Photographs cause false memories for the news. (2011) (36)
- Pluto behaving badly: false beliefs and their consequences. (2008) (36)
- Trigger Warnings Are Trivially Helpful at Reducing Negative Affect, Intrusive Thoughts, and Avoidance (2019) (35)
- Deconstructing Rich False Memories of Committing Crime: Commentary on Shaw and Porter (2015) (2018) (34)
- Explain this: Explaining childhood events inflates confidence for those events (2005) (33)
- False memories for end-of-life decisions. (2009) (30)
- The effect of nonprobative photographs on truthiness persists over time. (2013) (28)
- Psychotropic placebos reduce the misinformation effect by increasing monitoring at test (2008) (27)
- Misconceptions about childhood sexual abuse and child witnesses: Implications for psychological experts in the courtroom (2013) (26)
- Using source cues and familiarity cues to resist imagination inflation. (2005) (25)
- Imagination inflation is a fact, not an artifact: A reply to Pezdek and Eddy (2001) (24)
- A few seemingly harmless routes to a false memory (2005) (23)
- Discussion affects memory for true and false childhood events (2006) (22)
- People consider reliability and cost when verifying their autobiographical memories. (2014) (21)
- Psychotropic placebos create resistance to the misinformation effect (2007) (20)
- On the continuing lack of scientific evidence for repression (2006) (17)
- Misrepresentations and Flawed Logic About the Prevalence of False Memories (2016) (17)
- Postevent cues bias recognition performance in pigeons (2000) (17)
- Disfluent difficulties are not desirable difficulties: the (lack of) effect of Sans Forgetica on memory (2020) (15)
- Forgetting Sexual Trauma: What Does It Mean When 38% Forget?. (1994) (15)
- Nonprobative photos rapidly lead people to believe claims about their own (and other people’s) pasts (2016) (15)
- Contact Tracing: A Memory Task With Consequences for Public Health (2020) (15)
- Anchoring effects in the development of false childhood memories (2010) (14)
- True Photographs and False (2004) (13)
- Chronic and temporary aggression causes hostile false memories for ambiguous information (2008) (13)
- False memories: a kind of confabulation in non-clinical subjects (2009) (12)
- Illusory Recollection in Older Adults: Testing Mark Twain’s Conjecture (2013) (12)
- Speaking order predicts memory conformity after accounting for exposure to misinformation (2013) (12)
- Negative memories serve functions in both adaptive and maladaptive ways (2020) (12)
- Evidence that photos promote rosiness for claims about the future (2018) (11)
- A robust preference for cheap-and-easy strategies over reliable strategies when verifying personal memories (2017) (10)
- Uninformative Photos Can Increase People's Perceived Knowledge of Complicated Processes (2017) (10)
- Evidence That “Voluntary” Versus “Involuntary” Retrieval Is a Fluency-Based Attribution (2020) (10)
- Attitudes about Memory Dampening Drugs Depend on Context and Country (2011) (9)
- America was Great When Nationally Relevant Events Occurred and When Americans Were Young (2017) (9)
- Whatever gave you that idea? False memories following equivalence training: a behavioral account of the misinformation effect. (2011) (8)
- Warnings reduce false memories for missing aspects of events. (2011) (8)
- On cognition and the media (2007) (8)
- You say tomato ? Collaborative remembering between intimate couples leads to more false memories than collaborative remembering between strangers (2007) (8)
- Psychological Science, Victim Advocates, and the Problem of Recovered Memories (2008) (7)
- Repressed and Recovered Memory (2009) (7)
- Building false memories without suggestions. (2012) (6)
- Judgments of Memory Coherence Depend on the Conditions Under Which a Memory is Retrieved, Regardless of Reported PTSD Symptoms (2020) (6)
- ‘After they went I worked’: Mrs Larpent and her Needlework, 1790–1800 (2005) (5)
- Evidence for the efficacy of the MORI technique: Viewers do not notice or implicitly remember details from the alternate movie version (2009) (5)
- The Characteristics of Directive Future Experiences and Directive Memories (2017) (4)
- The Mere Presence of a Photo on a Product Label Can Change Taste Perception (2014) (4)
- Photos That Increase Feelings of Learning Promote Positive Evaluations (2017) (4)
- The importance of the smallest effect size of interest in expert witness testimony on alcohol and memory (2022) (3)
- Ordered questions bias eyewitnesses and jurors (2016) (3)
- How do ordered questions bias eyewitnesses? (2019) (3)
- Collective remembering and future forecasting during the COVID-19 pandemic: How the impact of COVID-19 affected the themes and phenomenology of global and national memories across 15 countries (2022) (3)
- Evidence From the Trauma-Film Paradigm That Traumatic and Nontraumatic Memories Are Statistically Equivalent on Coherence (2021) (2)
- Pigeons, Rats, and Humans Show Analogous Misinformation (2009) (2)
- Oversimplifications and Misrepresentations in the Repressed Memory Debate: A Reply to Ross (2022) (2)
- Memories people no longer believe in can still affect them in helpful and harmful ways (2022) (2)
- People who cheat on tests accurately predict their performance on future tests (2020) (2)
- Verbal Recall of Preverbal Memories: Implications for the Clinic and the Courtoom (2013) (2)
- America was great when nationally relevant events occurred and when Americans were young. (2017) (1)
- Collective memories serve similar functions to autobiographical memories (2022) (1)
- Sedan chairmen in eighteenth-century London (2016) (1)
- Judgments of memory coherence depend on the conditions under which a memory is retrieved, regardless of reported PTSD symptoms. (2020) (1)
- Thinking About Regret: Number of Memories and Ease of Retrieval Influence Judgments About Regret (2015) (1)
- People infuse their passwords with autobiographical information (2018) (1)
- Nonprobative photographs (or words) inflate truthiness (2012) (0)
- Incorporating Elizabeth Loftus’s Research on Memory Into Reforms to Protect the Innocent (2013) (0)
- The MORI Technique: Applications, findings, and possibilities (2006) (0)
- Misinforming pigeons in a DMTS task: (536982012-324) (1997) (0)
- And justice for all? Public perceptions of wrongful conviction. (2009) (0)
- Scholarship amid sheep: Applied cognition research in Aotearoa New Zealand. (2023) (0)
- Erratum: A photo, a suggestion, a false memory (2008) (0)
- We have got the whole child witness thing figured out, or have we? (2007) (0)
- Repeated Informationin the Courtroom (2012) (0)
- In the real world, people prefer their last whisky when tasting options in a long sequence (2018) (0)
- Speaking order predicts memory conformity after accounting for exposure to misinformation (2013) (0)
- Hierarchical Structure of Memory Beliefs. (1998) (0)
- RRR-Schooler-Michael (2013) (0)
- Trivially informative semantic context inflates people's confidence they can perform a highly complex skill (2022) (0)
- Did you get the memo? Memory distortions affect high-stakes commercial disputes, too (2019) (0)
- The memories that people would save or erase differ from their most positive and negative memories on function, emotion and correspondence with the life script (2022) (0)
- People draw on the consequences of others’ negative experiences to make unwarranted appraisals about those experiences. (2021) (0)
- Loftus’s Lineage in Developmental Forensic Research: Six Scientific Misconceptions About Children’s Suggestibility (2013) (0)
- Misinformation Effects and the Suggestibility of Eyewitness Memory (2013) (0)
- Evidence that photos promote rosiness for claims about the future (2016) (0)
- RRR-Schooler-MTurk (2014) (0)
- People Draw on the Consequences of Others’ Negative Experiences to Make Unwarranted Appraisals About Those Experiences (2021) (0)
- Nonprobative photos rapidly lead people to believe claims about their own (and other people’s) pasts (2016) (0)
- Title IX: The Big Mess on Campus (2019) (0)
- On the (non)persuasive power of a brain image (2013) (0)
- False claims about false memory research q (2006) (0)
- Medical professionals’ (mis)remembering of a simulated interaction with a patient: A medical misinformation effect (2019) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Maryanne Garry?
Maryanne Garry is affiliated with the following schools: