Doctored photographs can shape what people believe and remember about prominent public events, perhaps due to their apparent credibility. In three studies, subjects completed surveys about the 2012 London Olympic torch relay (Experiment 1) or the 2011 Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (Experiments 2-3). Some were shown a genuine photo of the event; others saw a doctored photo that depicted protesters and unrest. A third group of subjects saw a doctored photo whose inauthenticity had been made explicit, either by adding a written disclaimer (Experiment 1) or by making the digital manipulation deliberately poor (Experiments 2-3). In all three studies, doctored photos had small effects on a subset of subjects’ beliefs about th...
Previous research dealing with the effects of source credibility on eyewitness\u27 memories has foun...
Advances in digital technology mean that the creation of visually compelling photographic fakes is g...
A recent study showed that many people spontaneously report vivid memories of events that they do no...
Doctored photographs can shape what people believe and remember about prominent public events, perha...
Doctored images can cause people to believe in and remember experiences that never occurred, yet the...
Photos are powerful because people ascribe them more credibility than they often deserve. They can a...
Photos lead people to believe that both true and false events have happened to them, even when those...
Previous research has shown that information that is repeated is more likely to be rated as true tha...
People’s judgments are prone to the influence of feelings, even cognitive feelings such as the ease ...
When people evaluate claims they often rely on what comedian Stephen Colbert calls truthiness, judgi...
Numerous studies claim to have shown that false memories can be easily created in the laboratory. Ho...
When people rapidly judge the truth of claims presented with or without related but nonprobative pho...
Images have historically been perceived as photographic proof of the depicted events. However, the g...
ABSTRACT—Photographs help people illustrate the stories of their lives and the significant stories o...
Previous research dealing with the effects of source credibility on eyewitness\u27 memories has foun...
Advances in digital technology mean that the creation of visually compelling photographic fakes is g...
A recent study showed that many people spontaneously report vivid memories of events that they do no...
Doctored photographs can shape what people believe and remember about prominent public events, perha...
Doctored images can cause people to believe in and remember experiences that never occurred, yet the...
Photos are powerful because people ascribe them more credibility than they often deserve. They can a...
Photos lead people to believe that both true and false events have happened to them, even when those...
Previous research has shown that information that is repeated is more likely to be rated as true tha...
People’s judgments are prone to the influence of feelings, even cognitive feelings such as the ease ...
When people evaluate claims they often rely on what comedian Stephen Colbert calls truthiness, judgi...
Numerous studies claim to have shown that false memories can be easily created in the laboratory. Ho...
When people rapidly judge the truth of claims presented with or without related but nonprobative pho...
Images have historically been perceived as photographic proof of the depicted events. However, the g...
ABSTRACT—Photographs help people illustrate the stories of their lives and the significant stories o...
Previous research dealing with the effects of source credibility on eyewitness\u27 memories has foun...
Advances in digital technology mean that the creation of visually compelling photographic fakes is g...
A recent study showed that many people spontaneously report vivid memories of events that they do no...