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Home Purpose; Academic and Clinical Studies
Background
History of this project
The Archive
101 corroborated cases of recovered memory
Response to Critics
Dr. August Piper (1999)
Dr. Richard McNally (2003)
FAQs
Other Scholarly Resources
Bibliographies, links
to websites by four
doctoral-level
psychologists
Supportive
Information
For those with personal
questions & concerns
about sexual abuse &
those interested in
political & social
responses to sexual
abuse
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Background
This project began as a letter to PBS which objected to
false statements made by Ms.
Ofra Bikel, producer of the program "Divided Memories." That
letter described how an undergraduate Research Assistant
at Brown University found half a dozen corroborated cases
of recovered memory in just a few hours of electronic database
searching, disproving Ms. Bikel's claim to the contrary (Cheit,
1995). PBS did not defend Ms. Bikel's claim that "she could
not find any" corroborated cases of recovered memory in
her allegedly extensive search. Ms. Bikel's program was later
described in an article in the Columbia Journalism Review titled "U-Turn on Memory Lane" (July/Aug 1997) as "a four-hour polemic" that only "purported to be balanced".
This website 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).
While the evidence demonstrating
the existence of recovered memory has increased over time,
the need for this Web site remains clear as various journalists
(and academics) continue to fail to acknowledge this evidence.
The New York Times, for example, made this mistake
in its Science section on April 25, 2000. More recently,
in July 2003, Bruce Grierson's article on Susan Clancy in
the Sunday Magazine contained the false claim
that "cognitive
psychologists" as a group had rejected the concept of recovered
memory. In fact, three prominent cognitive psychologists
co-authored a chapter on Recovered Memories in the 2002 Encyclopedia
of the Human Brain, Volume 4. (pp 169-184). San Diego,
California and London: Academic Press. For a full-text
version of this chapter on Professor Jennifer Freyd's site;
read Silvers, Scholler & Freyd (2002) on this
page.
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Page last updated
July, 2005
Project Director
Professor Ross E. Cheit
Taubman Center for Public Policy & American Institutions
at Brown University
67 George Street
Box 1977
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Tel: 401-863-2201
Fax: 401-863-2452
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