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I'd like to tell you about a legal case that I worked on
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involving a man named Steve Titus.
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Titus was a restaurant manager.
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He was 31 years old, he lived in Seattle, Washington,
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he was engaged to Gretchen,
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about to be married, she was the love of his life.
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And one night, the couple went out
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for a romantic restaurant meal.
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They were on their way home,
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and they were pulled over by a police officer.
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You see, Titus's car sort of resembled
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a car that driven earlier in the evening
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by a man who raped a female hitchhiker,
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and Titus kind of resembled that rapist.
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So the police took a picture of Titus,
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they put it in a photo lineup,
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they later showed it to the victim,
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and she pointed to Titus's photo.
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She said, "That one's the closest."
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The police and the prosecution proceeded with a trial,
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and when Steve Titus was put on trial for rape,
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the rape victim got on the stand
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and said, "I'm absolutely positive that's the man."
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And Titus was convicted.
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He proclaimed his innocence,
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his family screamed at the jury,
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his fiancée collapsed on the floor sobbing,
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and Titus is taken away to jail.
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So what would you do at this point?
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What would you do?
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Well, Titus lost complete faith in the legal system,
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and yet he got an idea.
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He called up the local newspaper,
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he got the interest of an investigative journalist,
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and that journalist actually found the real rapist,
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a man who ultimately confessed to this rape,
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a man who was thought to have committed 50 rapes
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in that area,
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and when this information was given to the judge,
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the judge set Titus free.
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And really, that's where this case should have ended.
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It should have been over.
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Titus should have thought of this as a horrible year,
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a year of accusation and trial, but over.
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It didn't end that way.
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Titus was so bitter.
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He'd lost his job. He couldn't get it back.
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He lost his fiancée.
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She couldn't put up with his persistent anger.
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He lost his entire savings,
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and so he decided to file a lawsuit
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against the police and others whom he felt
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were responsible for his suffering.
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And that's when I really started working on this case,
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trying to figure out
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how did that victim go from
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"That one's the closest"
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to "I'm absolutely positive that's the guy."
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Well, Titus was consumed with his civil case.
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He spent every waking moment thinking about it,
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and just days before he was to have his day in court,
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he woke up in the morning,
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doubled over in pain,
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and died of a stress-related heart attack.
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He was 35 years old.
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So I was asked to work on Titus's case
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because I'm a psychological scientist.
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I study memory. I've studied memory for decades.
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And if I meet somebody on an airplane
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-- this happened on the way over to Scotland --
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if I meet somebody on an airplane,
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and we ask each other, "What do you do? What do you do?"
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and I say "I study memory,"
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they usually want to tell me how they have trouble remembering names,
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or they've got a relative who's got Alzheimer's
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or some kind of memory problem,
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but I have to tell them
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I don't study when people forget.
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I study the opposite: when they remember,
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when they remember things that didn't happen
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or remember things that were different
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from the way they really were.
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I study false memories.
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Unhappily, Steve Titus is not the only person
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to be convicted based on somebody's false memory.
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In one project in the United States,
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information has been gathered
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on 300 innocent people,
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300 defendants who were convicted of crimes they didn't do.
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They spent 10, 20, 30 years in prison for these crimes,
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and now DNA testing has proven
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that they are actually innocent.
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And when those cases have been analyzed,
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three quarters of them
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are due to faulty memory, faulty eyewitness memory.
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Well, why?
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Like the jurors who convicted those innocent people
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and the jurors who convicted Titus,
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many people believe that memory
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works like a recording device.
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You just record the information,
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then you call it up and play it back
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when you want to answer questions or identify images.
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But decades of work and psychology
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has shown that this just isn't true.
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Our memories are constructive.
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They're reconstructive.
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Memory works a little bit more like a Wikipedia page:
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you can go in there and change it, but so can other people.
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I first started studying this constructive memory process
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in the 1970s.
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I did my experiments that involved showing people
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simulated crimes and accidents
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and asking them questions about what they remember.
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In one study, we showed people a simulated accident
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and we asked people,
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how fast were the cars going when they hit each other?
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And we asked other people,
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how fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other?
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And if we asked the leading "smashed" question,
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the witnesses told us the cars were going faster,
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and moreover, that leading "smashed" question
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caused people to be more likely to tell us
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that they saw broken glass in the accident scene
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when there wasn't any broken glass at all.
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In another study, we showed a simulated accident
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where a car went through an intersection with a stop sign,
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and if we asked a question that insinuated it was a yield sign,
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many witnesses told us they remember seeing a yield sign
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at the intersection, not a stop sign.
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And you might be thinking, well, you know,
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these are filmed events,
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they are not particularly stressful.
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Would the same kind of mistakes be made
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with a really stressful event?
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In a study we published just a few months ago,
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we have an answer to this question,
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because what was unusual about this study
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is we arranged for people to have a very stressful experience.
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The subjects in this study
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were members of the U.S. military
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who were undergoing a harrowing training exercise
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to teach them what it's going to be like for them
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if they are ever captured as prisoners of war.
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And as part of this training exercise,
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these soldiers are interrogated in an aggressive,
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hostile, physically abusive fashion for 30 minutes
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and later on they have to try to identify
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the person who conducted that interrogation.
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And when we feed them suggestive information
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that insinuates it's a different person,
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many of them misidentify their interrogator,
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often identifying someone who doesn't even remotely
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resemble the real interrogator.
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And so what these studies are showing
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is that when you feed people misinformation
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about some experience that they may have had,
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you can distort or contaminate or change their memory.
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Well out there in the real world,
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misinformation is everywhere.
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We get misinformation
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not only if we're questioned in a leading way,
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but if we talk to other witnesses
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who might consciously or inadvertently feed us
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some erroneous information,
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or if we see media coverage about some event we might have experienced,
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all of these provide the opportunity
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for this kind of contamination of our memory.
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In the 1990s, we began to see
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an even more extreme kind of memory problem.
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Some patients were going into therapy with one problem
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-- maybe they had depression, eating disorder --
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and they were coming out of therapy
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with a different problem.
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Extreme memories for horrific brutalizations,
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sometimes in Satanic rituals,
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sometimes involving really bizarre and unusual elements.
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One woman came out of psychotherapy
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believing that she'd endured years
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of ritualistic abuse, where she was forced into a pregnancy
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and that the baby was cut from her belly.
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But there were no physical scars
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or any kind of physical evidence
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that could have supported her story.
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And when I began looking into these cases,
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I was wondering,
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where do these bizarre memories come from?
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And what I found is that most of these situations
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involved some particular form of psychotherapy.
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And so I asked,
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were some of the things going on in this psychotherapy
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like the imagination exercises
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or dream interpretation,
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or in some cases hypnosis,
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or in some cases exposure to false information,
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were these leading these patients
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to develop these very bizarre,
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unlikely memories?
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And I designed some experiments
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to try to study the processes that were being used
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in this psychotherapy so I could study
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the development of these very rich false memories.
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In one of the first studies we did,
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we used suggestion,
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a method inspired by the psychotherapy we saw in these cases,
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we used this kind of suggestion
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and planted a false memory
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that when you were a kid, five or six years old,
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you were lost in a shopping mall.
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You were frightened. You were crying.
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You were ultimately rescued by an elderly person
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and reunited with the family.
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And we succeeded in planting this memory
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in the minds of about a quarter of our subjects.
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And you might be thinking, well,
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that's not particularly stressful.
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But we and other investigators have planted
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rich false memories of things that were
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much more unusual and much more stressful.
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So in a study done in Tennessee,
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researchers planted the false memory
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that when you were a kid, you nearly drowned
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and had to be rescued by a life guard.
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And in a study done in Canada,
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researchers planted the false memory
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that when you were a kid,
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something as awful as being attacked by a vicious animal
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happened to you,
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succeeding with about half of their subjects.
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And in study done in Italy,
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researchers planted the false memory,
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when you were a kid, you witnessed demonic possession.
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I do want to add that it might seem
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like we are traumatizing these experimental subjects
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in the name of science,
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but our studies have gone through thorough evaluation
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by research ethics boards
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that have made the decision
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that the temporary discomfort that some
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of these subjects might experience in these studies
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is outweighed by the importance of this problem
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for understanding memory processes
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and the abuse of memory that is going on
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in some places in the world.
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Well, to my surprise,
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when I published this work and began to speak out
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against this particular brand of psychotherapy,
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it created some pretty bad problems for me:
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hostilities, primarily from the repressed memory therapists,
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who felt under attack,
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and by the patients whom they had influenced.
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I had sometimes armed guards at speeches
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that I was invited to give,
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people trying to drum up letter-writing campaigns to get me fired.
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But probably the worst
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was I suspected that a woman
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was innocent of abuse
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that was being claimed by her grown daughter.
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She accused her mother of sexual abuse
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based on a repressed memory.
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And this accusing daughter had actually allowed her story
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to be filmed and presented in public places.
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I was suspicious of this story,
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and so I started to investigate,
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and eventually found information that convinced me
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that this mother was innocent.
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I published and exposé on the case,
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and a little while later, the accusing daughter
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filed a lawsuit.
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Even though I'd never mentioned her name,
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she sued me for defamation and invasion of privacy.
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And I went through nearly five years
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of dealing with this messy, unpleasant litigation,
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but finally, finally, it was over and I could really
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get back to my work.
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In the process, however, I became part
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of a disturbing trend in America
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where scientists are being sued
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for simply speaking out on matters of great public controversy.
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When I got back to my work, I asked this question:
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if I plant a false memory in your mind,
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does it have repercussions?
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Does it affect your later thoughts,
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your later behaviors?
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Our first study planted a false memory
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that you get sick as a child eating certain foods:
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hard-boiled eggs, dill pickles, strawberry ice cream.
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And we found that once we planted this false memory,
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people didn't want to eat the foods as much
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at an outdoor picnic.
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The false memories aren't necessarily bad or unpleasant.
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If we planted a warm, fuzzy memory
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involving a healthy food like asparagus,
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we could get people to want to eat asparagus more.
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And so what these studies are showing
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is that you can plant false memories
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and they have repercussions
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that affect behavior long after the memories take hold.
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Well, along with this ability
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to plant memories and control behavior
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obviously comes some important ethical issues,
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like, when should we use this mind technology?
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And should we ever ban its use?
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Therapists can't ethically plant false memories
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in the mind of their patients
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even if it would help the patient,
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but there's nothing to stop a parent
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from trying this out on their overweight or obese teenager.
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And when I suggested this publicly,
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it created an outcry again.
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"There she goes. She's advocating that parents lie to their children."
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Hello, Santa Claus.
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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I mean, another way to think about this is,
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which would you rather have,
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a kid with obesity, diabetes, shortened lifespan,
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all the things that go with it,
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or the kid with one little extra bit of false memory?
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I know what I would choose for a kid of mine.
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But maybe my work has made me different from most people.
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Most people cherish their memories,
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know that they represent their identity,
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who they are, where they came from.
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And I appreciate that. I feel that way too.
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But I know from my work
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how much fiction is already in there.
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If I've learned anything from these decades
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of working on these problems, it's this:
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just because somebody tells you something
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and they say it with confidence,
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just because they say it with lots of detail,
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just because they express emotion when they say it,
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it doesn't mean that it really happened.
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We can't reliably distinguish true memories from false memories.
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We need independent corroboration.
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Such a discovery has made me more tolerant
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of the everyday memory mistakes
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that my friends and family members make.
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Such a discovery might have saved Steve Titus,
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the man whose whole future was snatched away
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by a false memory.
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But meanwhile, we should all keep in mind,
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we'd do well to,
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that memory, like liberty,
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is a fragile thing.
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Thank you. Thank you.
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Thank you. (Applause)
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Thanks very much. (Applause)