PhD Conferral Mr. Ivan Mangiulli, MSc.
Supervisor: prof.dr. M. Jelicic
Co-supervisors: dr. A. Curci, University of Bari, dr. K. van Oorsouw
Keywords: feigning amnesia, memory, crime
"Cognitive Mechanisms Behind the Memory-Undermining Effect of Feigned Crime-Related Amnesia”
Oftentimes individuals charged with severe crimes, such as homicide, claim memory loss for their criminal experience (i.e., crime-related amnesia). However, the act of feigning amnesia negatively affects defendants’ genuine memory when they try to remember what they have committed. This dissertation examines the consequences for memory when individuals feign crime-related amnesia, in order to understand and explain why and how this phenomenon occurs. Overall, the most important finding of this dissertation yielded that although, to some extent, inhibition-based mechanism might explain simulators’ impaired recollection; genuine memory for a crime in general remains uncompromised despite a previously feigned amnesia claim.
Also read
-
PhD Defence Ruben Andreas Bressler
"Neurofeedback for Performance: Improving the Mental Resilience of Dutch Police Special Forces"
18 Jun -
PhD Defence Pablo-Alexandre Mallaroni
"Decomposing the Psychedelic State: Insights from the brain, behaviour, and context"
23 Jun -
PhD Defence Hongyu Zhao
"Restoring Lost Memories PDE4 Inhibition and Subliminal Reactivation as Novel Approaches to Counteract Sleep Deprivation-Induced Memory Deficits"
23 Jun