'Implanted' memories are indistinguishable from real ones when told to other people say researchers who tricked volunteers into thinking they had committed a crime
- People can determine between a real and fake memory only 53% of the time
- The study showed a group of 200 people footage from a 2015 study where participants were coerced into thinking they had committed a crime
- The new volunteers were found to mostly misinterpret real memories as fake
The likelihood of determining whether someone is sharing a real or false memory of a crime that has been implanted in a person's recollection is 'no better than tossing a coin', a new study reveals.
People listening to recounted events of a criminal act were only able to determine between the two with 53 percent accuracy, leaving experts to question how criminal proceedings are conducted.
Even when participants in the experiment were told that some of the videos featured false memories, they were still unable to identify the real and fake stories correctly - they were also more likely to misinterpret a real memory as being fake.
The researchers suggest the 'questioning process should be evidence-based, to reduce the risk of implanting false memories in people being questioned by the police.'
Scroll down for video
People listening to recounted events of a criminal act were only able to determine between the two with 53 percent accuracy, leaving experts to question how criminal proceedings are conducted
In 2015, Dr. Julia Shaw, a professor at the University College London, and her colleagues used suggestive tactics to persuade participants into believing they had committed a crime - and 70 percent of the subjects were found to develop false memories.
Researchers asked questions about their past and used leading questions in a way that convinced them they were recovering forgotten memories.
The tactics was carried out with the help of the volunteer's family members, who told Shaw and her team about true and emotional childhood events that had actually occurred.
They told participants that their parents had revealed a crime or dramatic, but fabricated, incident and asked them to relive that event as if it had actually happened - all of which was recorded on video.
Judges in particular should never assume that they can tell when someone has a false memory, and should consider the entire process to see if there was any risk of contamination of a defendant or witness' memories
Shaw noted they were implanting false memories about them committing a crime, such as theft and assault, when they were young.
And noted they were 'essentially doing exactly 'what not to do' when conducting a police interview.'
'Everyone thinks that they couldn't be tricked into believing they have done something they never did, and that if someone were telling them about a false memory, they would be able to spot it,' said Shaw.
'But we found that actually, people tend to be quite susceptible to having false memories, and they sound just like real memories.'
For the recent experiment, the team used the 205 footage and showed it to a group of 200 people.
After watching the videos, the new participant were asked if the person being questioned was describing an event that actually happened or was made-up.
Shaw found that participants were only 53 percent accurate when identifying false memories of committing a crime.
Even when participants were told that some of the memories they watched were false, their judgment was still no better than tossing a coin.
Not only were they identifying false memories as true, the group was just as likely to recount a genuine memory as being fake.
'Legal professionals and police officers need to realize how easy it is to manipulate someone's memories,' said Shaw.
'Judges in particular should never assume that they can tell when someone has a false memory, and should consider the entire process to see if there was any risk of contamination of a defendant or witness' memories.
'The findings really highlight how important it is to ensure that criminal proceedings are done right.
'The questioning process should be evidence-based, to reduce the risk of implanting false memories in people being questioned by the police.'
Shaw's 2015 study was the first to successfully implant false memories of committing a crime - involving either assault or assault with a weapon that resulted in police contact.
The findings have clear implications for criminal interrogation and other aspects of legal procedure, affecting suspects, witnesses, and law-enforcers, as well as for interviews that take place as part of therapy, she added in a statement from 2015.
'Understanding that these complex false memories exist, and that 'normal' individuals can be led to generate them quite easily, is the first step in preventing them from happening.
'By empirically demonstrating the harm that 'bad' interview techniques - those which are known to cause false memories - can cause, we can more readily convince interviewers to avoid them and use 'good' techniques instead.'
Most watched News videos
- Furious Putin is told Ukrainian soldiers have crossed Russian border
- Bodies of dead Russian soldiers on destroyed military column
- Radio station and shopping mall shake during Japan earthquake
- Moment CTSFO police use flashbangs to raid in West Kensington
- Thousands gather for counter-protest against far-right in Belfast
- Moment police arrest Britain's oldest rioter William Morgan
- Moment golden retriever crushes three-year-old girl to death
- Rioters torch Spellow library in Liverpool destroying hundred of books
- Huge container ship erupts into fireball while docked in China port
- Moment police arrest Facebook user for inciting violence in a first
- Woman caught poisoning opponent's chess board before tournament
- 'Drunk' rioter lobs metal sheeting at cops in Hartlepool