-Caveat Lector-


Planting False Childhood Memories in Children: The Role of Event  
Plausibility - Kathy Pezdek, Danelle Hodge Child Development, Vol. 70, No. 4  
(Jul. - 
Aug., 1999), pp. 887-895  Abstract - This experiment tested and  supported the 
hypothesis that events will be suggestively planted in children's  memory to 
the 
degree that the suggested event is plausible and script-relevant  knowledge 
exists in memory. Nineteen 5- to 7-year-old children and 20 9- to  12-year-old 
children were read descriptions of two true events and two false  events, 
reported to have occurred when they were 4 years old. One false event  
described 
the child lost in a mall while shopping (the plausible false event);  the other 
false event described the child receiving a rectal enema (the  implausible 
false event). The majority of the 39 children (54%) did not remember  either 
false event. However, whereas 14 children recalled the plausible but not  the 
implausible false event, only one child recalled the implausible but not the  
plausible false event; this difference was statistically significant. Three  
additional children (all in the younger age group) recalled both false events.  
Although this pattern of results was consistent for both age groups, the  
differences were significant for the younger children only. A framework is  
outlined 
specifying the cognitive processes underlying suggestively planting  false 
events in memory. 
_http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0009-3920%28199907%2F08%2970%3A4%3C887%3APFCMIC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-G&size=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage_
 
(http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0009-3920(199907/08)70:4<887:PFCMIC>2.0.CO;2-G&size
=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage)  
 
“Michelle Remembers” by Michelle Smith and Lawrence Pazder, MD “A NOTE FROM  
THE PUBLISHER” pages xi - xiii” “Dr. Pazder’s credentials are impressive. 
He  obtained his M.D. from the University of Alberta in 1961; his diploma in  
tropical medicine from the University Liverpool in 1962; and in 1968, his  
specialist certificate in psychiatry and his diploma in psychological medicine  
from McGill University. In 1971, he was made a fellow of Canada’s Royal College 
 
of Physicians and Surgeons. He is a member of three Canadian professional  
associations and of the American Psychiatric Association as well. He practiced  
medicine in West Africa and has participated in medical task forces and health 
 organizations. He has been chairman of the Mental Health Committee of the 
Health  Planning Council for British Columbia. A member of the staff of two 
hospitals in  Victoria, British Columbia–the Royal Jubilee and the Victoria 
General
–he is in  private practice with a group of five psychiatrists. His 
professional papers  include a study of the long-term effects of stress upon 
concentration-camp  victims. Two experienced interviewers journeyed to Victoria 
and 
talked to Dr.  Pazder’s colleagues, to the priests and the bishop who became 
involved in the  case, to doctors who treated Michelle Smith when she was a 
child, 
to relatives  and friends. From local newspaper, clergy, and police sources 
they learned that  reports of Satanism in Victoria are not infrequent and that 
Satanism has  apparently existed there for many years.  Satanism in Western 
Canada  flourished in many areas with activities far more ominous than some of 
the  innocuous groups now found in parts of the United States who claim some  
connection with Satanism. The source material was scrutinized. The many  
thousands of pages of transcript of the tape recordings that Dr. Pazder and  
Michelle 
Smith made of their psychiatric sessions were read and digested; they  became 
the basis of this book. The tapes themselves were listened to in good  
measure, and the videotapes made of some of his sessions were viewed. Both the  
audio and video are powerfully convincing.  It is nearly unthinkable that  the 
protracted agony they record could have been fabricated.” Thomas B. Congdon,  
Jr 
New York April 22, 1980
 
Parental Alienation Syndrome: What Professionals Need to Know Part 1 of  2  
Update - Volume 16, Number 6, 2003 By Erika Rivera Ragland & Hope  Fields PAS 
is based primarily upon two notions, neither of which has a  foundation in 
empirical research. 1. PAS Presupposes a High Rate of False  Accusations in 
Custody Cases The theory of PAS is based in part on the notion  that, within 
custody 
disputes, there is a high incidence of false abuse  allegations. Dr. Gardner 
theorized that allegations arising within the context  of a custody dispute 
have a “high likelihood of being false,”5 and went so far  as to state that he 
believed “the vast majority of allegations in this category  [divorce cases 
with custody disputes] are false.” To the contrary, the available  research 
suggests that false allegation rates are not significantly high. For  example, 
a 
1990 study by Thoennes and Tjaden evaluated 9,000 divorces in 12  states and 
found that sexual abuse allegations were made in less than 2 percent  of the 
contested divorces involving child custody. Within this group, it appears  
false 
allegations occurred in approximately 5% to 8% of cases. This study is one  of 
the most comprehensive and least subject to bias and sampling problems, since 
 its sample is so large and representative of the population of those 
divorcing  with custody and visitation disputes. 2. PAS Presumes a Disadvantage 
to 
Women in  Child Custody Determinations....Other Weaknesses: Lack of Peer Review 
and  Recognition by DSM-IV Dr. Gardner mostly self-published and thus did not  
generally subject his theory to the peer review process. Moreover, PAS is not 
 recognized by any professional associations, including the American 
Psychiatric  Association. PAS is also not included within the DSM-IV. It is 
also worth 
noting  that Dr. Gardner often expressed disdain for child abuse 
professionals, labeling  them “validators,” theorizing that greed and desire 
for 
increased business  prompted some sexual abuse allegations, and speculating 
that 
parents and  professionals alike made some false allegations because “all of us 
have some  pedophilia within us.” Conclusion - At best, PAS is a nondiagnostic “
syndrome”  that only explains the behavior of the child and the mother when 
there is a  known false allegation. It is a courtroom diagnosis befitting 
adversaries  involved in legal sparring. It is not capable of lending itself to 
hard 
data or  inclusion in the forthcoming DSM-V. In short, PAS is an untested 
theory that,  unchallenged, can have far-reaching consequences for children 
seeking protection  and legal vindication in courts of law.
_http://www.ndaa.org/publications/newsletters/update_volume_16_number_6_2003.h
tml_ 
(http://www.ndaa.org/publications/newsletters/update_volume_16_number_6_2003.html)
 
 
Parental Alienation Syndrome: What Professionals Need to Know Update -  
Volume 16, Number 7, 2003 Part 2 of 2 By Hope Fields & Erika Rivera Ragland  
PAS is 
an unproven theory that can threaten the integrity of the criminal  justice 
system and the safety of abused children. Prosecutors should educate  
themselves about PAS and be prepared to argue against its admission in court. 
In  cases 
where PAS testimony is admitted, it is a prosecutor’s responsibility to  
educate the judge and jury about the shortfalls of this theory. As more 
criminal  
courts refuse to admit PAS evidence, more protection will be afforded to 
victims  of sexual abuse in our court system. 
_http://www.ndaa.org/publications/newsletters/update_volume_16_number_7_2003.html_
 
(http://www.ndaa.org/publications/newsletters/update_volume_16_number_7_2003.html)
 



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48)

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