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5 pages in length. The writer discusses recovered memories and Type A personalities as they relate to emotions, memory and cognitive failure. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCEmoshCg.rtf
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example from eyewitness testimony and recovered memories. The inherent fallibility of eyewitness testimony has been the focus of myriad debates, inasmuch as research illustrates how first-hand observers are easily
distracted by the emotions evoked from certain lines of questioning, clearly indicating how their recollection becomes skewed and the answers they provide somehow mesh with what they perceive to be
the truth. Elizabeth Loftus has spent considerable time tracking this particular phenomenon, noting how details become more readily available in conjunction with repeated and exhaustive questioning; as such, the
eyewitnesss answers no longer pertain to the events that occurred, but rather to the emotional aspect of the questions being asked (Loftus, 1995). Employing recovered memories has proven to be
an even more dangerous approach to getting to the truth in a court case, being that the fairly recent trend toward psychotherapy has rendered myriad individuals with memories of things
that either did not take place or whose truths have been so horribly altered that all that can be retrieved is a smattering of recollection. The techniques by which
this often erroneous information is extracted have come under fire of late, standing accused of instigating the repressed - if not faulty and wholly inaccurate - memories that have all
too readily put innocent people behind bars. "Therapists accounts, patients accounts, and sworn statements from litigation have revealed that highly suggestive techniques go on in some therapists offices" (Loftus,
1995, pp. 1-14). Type A personalities represent the kind of people who experience cognitive failures due to their constant pattern of impatience, competitiveness, ambitiousness, hostility, aggression, achievement drive, low tolerance,
frustration, high job involvement, relentless association to time and infinite focus. The cyclical blueprint of Type A behavior pattern (TABP), defined as "an action emotion complex that can be
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