Psychologist may or may not remember her biggest day
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Jeff Benson
Elizabeth Loftus calls it the highest national award she could
receive as a psychologist, but the distinguished UC Irvine research
professor might not always clearly remember being notified that she
won it.
If her theories come to fruition, Loftus will have to factor in
the occasional mind distortion, contaminated memory and unreliability
of eyewitness testimony. And maybe, just maybe, she’ll determine she
got caught up in the moment.
Loftus received the 2005 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award
for Psychology last week for her research on false recollections and
the malleability of memory.
The Grawemeyer Awards annually honor the most powerful ideas in
psychology, education, religion, music composition and improving
world order. Each winner is given a $200,000 prize.
“I was pretty shocked,” Loftus said. “There just isn’t any other
prize like this for a psychologist. There’s no Nobel Prize for
psychology, so really there’s no other way for a psychologist to win
in this way.”
In 2002, the Review of General Psychology ranked Loftus the 58th
most eminent psychologist of the 20th century. She was the top-ranked
woman on the list.
She’s also been an expert witness or consultant in nearly 200
high-profile legal cases involving the validity of eyewitness
testimony or possible false recollections, said Ron Huff, dean of the
UC Irvine School of Social Ecology. Trials involving Michael Jackson,
Rodney King and the Oklahoma City bombing were among those cases.
“In my research on wrongful convictions over the last 20 years, I
relied on her a lot,” Huff said. “There are so many cases on wrongful
convictions -- and by that I mean people who are later determined
innocent beyond doubt. Many of these cases turn on eyewitness error.
“Loftus is one of the real pioneers in this field. She’s respected
around world for her work, which this prize recognizes.”
Loftus’s research has shown that people not only forget over time
but also falsely remember, recalling events that never happened when
their minds blend inaccurate information with their memory of what
actually happened.
Individuals sometimes have difficulty separating the two, such as
in eyewitness testimony, she said.
“I have been an advocate of the notion that people sometimes have
erroneous beliefs or misconceptions over how testimony works,” she
said. “When people bring erroneous beliefs into the courtroom,
sometimes they make mistakes. We know one of the main reasons people
are falsely convicted is due to inaccurate testimony.”
In the 1990s, much of Loftus’s research was spent making people
believe they’ve had entirely false experiences, she said. Some of her
subjects have left her sessions inaccurately believing they’ve
witnessed demonic possession and that they were harassed by a bully
in their youth, she said.
“I could make you believe the man who ran from the scene had curly
hair instead of straight hair, or that you were lost in a mall at the
age of 6, and people had to come find you,” she said. “Other people
have taken this paradigm and really run with it.”
Most of her prize money will be used to further her research at
UCI, she said. She is researching people’s bad experiences with food,
such as getting sick from eating dill pickles, and looking into how
the experiences can affect subsequent thoughts and memories.
The research she’s conducted has been primarily in restaurants,
but she’d like to broaden her scope, she said.
“I want to take [a research group] out for a real picnic and
barbecue and put real foods in front of them for a more realistic
study,” she said. “I’m trying to demonstrate that false beliefs and
false memories do have repercussions for everybody.
“But I’m still digesting the news that I won.”
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