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Individual and Cultural Reality Monitoring
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 560, Heft 1, S. 179-193
ISSN: 1552-3349
What is the relationship between our perceptions, memories, knowledge, beliefs, and expectations, on one hand, and reality, on the other? Studies of individual cognition show that distortions may occur as a by-product of normal reality-monitoring processes. Characterizing the conditions that increase and decrease such distortions has implications for understanding, for example, the nature of autobiographical memory, the potential suggestibility of child and adult eyewitnesses, and recent controversies about the recovery of repressed memories. Confabulations and delusions associated with brain damage, along with data from neuroimaging studies, indicate that the frontal regions of the brain are critical in normal reality monitoring. The author argues that reality monitoring is fundamental not only to individual cognition but also to social/cultural cognition. Social/cultural reality monitoring depends on institutions, such as the press and the courts, that function as our cultural frontal lobes. Where does normal social/cultural error in reality monitoring end and social/cultural pathology begin?
Individual and Cultural Reality Monitoring
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 560, S. 179-193
ISSN: 0002-7162
Explores the relationship between reality & perceptions, memories, knowledge, beliefs, & expectations. Studies of individual cognition show that distortions may occur as a by-product of normal reality-monitoring processes. Characterizing the conditions that increase & decrease such distortions has implications for understanding, for example, the nature of autobiographical memory, the potential suggestibility of child & adult eyewitnesses, & recent controversies about the recovery of repressed memories. Confabulations & delusions associated with brain damage, along with data from neuroimaging studies, indicate that the frontal regions of the brain are critical in normal reality monitoring. Here, it is argued that reality monitoring is fundamental not only to individual cognition but also to social/cultural cognition. Social/cultural reality monitoring depends on institutions, eg, the press & courts, that function as cultural frontal lobes. Where does normal social/cultural error in reality monitoring end & social/cultural pathology begin? 46 References. Adapted from the source document.