Chapter 8 infographic image description

The title of the infographic is, Thinking Critically About: Can Memories of Childhood Sexual Abuse Be Repressed and Then Recovered?

The Learning Objective Question reads, Why have reports of repressed and recovered memories been so hotly debated?

The main heading reads, Two Possible Tragedies:

The first panel text reads, Number 1. People doubt childhood sexual abuse survivors who tell their secret.

The second panel text reads, Number 2. Innocent people are falsely accused, as therapists prompt open quotes recovered close quotes memories of childhood sexual abuse.

In this panel, there is an illustration of a client sitting on a chair with her knees drawn up under her chin. On the other side of this panel is an image of a therapist looking at the client. The therapist is saying, open quotes, Victims of sexual abuse often have your symptoms. So maybe you were abused and repressed the memory. Let’s see if I can help you recover the memory, by digging back and visualizing your trauma. Close quotes.

Thought bubbles are coming from the client’s head and lead to the next panel where the first thought bubble is of a blurry image of a man. Under that blurry image the text reads, Misinformation effect and source amnesia: Adult client may form image of threatening person. Then a right-facing arrow points to a thought bubble with a clearer image of the man with the caption, With rehearsal (repeated therapy sessions), the image grows more vivid. Another right-facing arrow points to an image of the client’s face looking dismayed. The caption reads, Client is stunned, angry, and ready to confront or sue the remembered abuser. The last right-facing arrow points to a clear image of the man looking very sad, with his hand up. The caption reads, Accused person is equally stunned and vigorously denies the long-ago accusation.

In the next panel, the text reads, Professional organizations (including the American Medical, American Psychological, and American Psychiatric Associations) are working to find sensible common ground to resolve psychology’s open quotes memory war close quotes. (Footnote 1: Patihis et al., 2014a.)

A bulleted list follows.

In the next panel, the text reads, Psychologists question whether repression ever occurs.

In the last panel, the text reads, Traumatic experiences (witnessing a loved one's murder, being terrorized by a hijacker or rapist, losing everything in a natural disaster) typically lead to vivid, persistent, haunting memories. (Footnote 9: Porter & Peace, 2007.)