Alien Abduction Tales Offer Clues on Memory
Alien Abduction Tales Offer
Clues on Memory
Study: Distress Doesn't Necessarily Validate Traumatic Memories
http://content.health.msn.com/content/article/89/100279.htm
By Jennifer Warner
Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
on Friday, June 25, 2004
June 25, 2004 -- Recalling a traumatic memory may provoke severe
distress in people, even if the memory may be a product of their own
imagination, according to a new study.
The study showed that people who claim to have been abducted by
aliens show the same signs of distress, such as increased heart rate, sweating,
and muscle tension, shown by people recalling more plausible traumatic events,
such as wartime experiences.
Researchers say these signs of distress are often viewed as a
testament to authenticity of a person's memory of a traumatic event, such as
childhood abuse. But the researchers say these results show that physiological
responses should not be used to verify traumatic memories in the evaluation of
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Alien Memories Provoke Distress
In the study, researchers recruited people who said they had
been abducted by aliens and had them describe their alien encounter as well as
other stressful, happy, or neutral memories.
The researchers converted those recollections into 30-second
narratives and played them back to the "abductees" while measuring their heart
rate, sweat production, and facial muscle tension. For comparison, researchers
also played the tapes to a group of people who had no memories of alien
abductions.
The study showed that people who said they had been abducted by
aliens had strong distressful reactions to the stressful and alien abduction
narratives and weaker reactions to the others. The comparison group had little
reaction to any of the stories.
The study also showed that people who said they were abducted by
aliens also scored higher on measures of psychological traits that make them
more likely to experience alterations in consciousness, to have a rich fantasy
life, and to endorse unconventional beliefs.
Researchers say that for people who believe they have been
abducted by aliens, recalling their abduction can provoke physiological
reactions similar to those evoked by more verifiable stressful memories.
Therefore, they say physiological responses are not a valid
indicator of whether a memory is real or not.
"Although improbable traumatic memories (e.g. being sexually
probed on a spaceship) provoke physiological reactions comparable to those
provoked by more conventional and verifiable traumatic memories (e.g. a
firefight in Vietnam), one should not conclude that PTSD patients are reporting
false memories of trauma," write researcher Richard McNally of Harvard
University and colleagues in the July issue of Psychological Science.
"Conversely, the physiological markers of emotion that accompany
recollection of a memory cannot be taken as evidence of the memory's
authenticity," they conclude.
SOURCES: McNally, R. Psychological Science,
July 2004; vol 15: pp 493-497. News release, American Psychological Society.