Factors affecting the forced confabulation effect: a meta-analysis of laboratory studies

Paul Riesthuis*, Henry Otgaar, Glynis Bogaard, Ivan Mangiulli

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

During police investigations, interviewees are sometimes forced to confabulate a response to questions for which they don't know the answer. In this registered report, we conducted a three-level meta-analysis to examine whether forcing people to confabulate an answer to these questions can lead to false memories for the confabulated details and/or events (i.e., forced confabulation effect). Results showed that forced confabulation indeed led to the production of false memories. Qualitative reviews of studies suggested that the forced confabulation effect is enhanced after receiving confirmatory feedback. Moreover, we found evidence that longer delays between the forced confabulation phase and the final memory task are necessary to observe the forced confabulation effect for entire events. However, caution is needed when interpreting the forced confabulation effect. Specifically, our moderator analyses revealed that voluntarily produced confabulation led to more false memories than forced confabulation. Also, our exploratory analysis indicated that the forced confabulation effect was mainly observed in within-subject designs. Taken together, our meta-analysis supports the notion that forcing participants to confabulate can lead them to later report such confabulations as part of the truth. Nonetheless, caution is warranted because this effect might be due to the introduction of misinformation through asking unanswerable questions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)635-651
Number of pages17
JournalMemory
Volume31
Issue number5
Early online date8 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 May 2023

Keywords

  • Lying
  • forced confabulation
  • memory
  • false memory
  • meta-analysis
  • INTERVIEWING WITNESSES
  • MEMORY
  • FEEDBACK
  • MISINFORMATION
  • SUSCEPTIBILITY
  • ELABORATION
  • PERSONALITY
  • ACCURACY
  • QUALITY

Cite this