A Comparison of Normal Forgetting, Psychopathology, and Information-processing Models of Reported Amnesia for Recent Sexual Trauma

Mindy B. Mechanic, Patricia A. Resick, Michael G. Griffin

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Abstract

This study assessed memories for sexual trauma in a nontreatment-seeking sample of recent rape victims and considered competing explanations for failed recall. Participants were 92 female rape victims assessed within 2 weeks of the rape; 62 were also assessed 3 months postassault. Memory deficits for parts of the rape were common 2 weeks postassault (37%) but improved over the 3-month window studied (16% still partially amnesic). Hypotheses evaluated competing models of explanation that may account for reported recall deficits. Results are most consistent with information-processing models of traumatic memory.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Volume66
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 1998

Disciplines

  • Psychology

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