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【高校英語】共通テストの英文解釈 vol.1239
≪2022年共通テスト追試第6問A≫ 2022/9/3配信
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今回は2022年共通テスト追試第6問Aを解説します。
■ 問題
第6問
A Your study group is learning about "false memories." One group member
has made partial notes. Read this article to complete the notes for your
next study meeting.
[False Memories]
What are memories? Most people imagine them to be something like video
recordings of events in our minds. Whether it is a memory of love that we
treasure or something more like failure that we fear, most of us believe
our memories are a permanent record of what happened. We may agree that
they get harder to recall as time goes on, but we think we remember the
truth. Psychologists now tell us that this is not the case. Our memories
can change or even be changed. They can move anywhere from slightly
incorrect to absolutely false! According to well-known researcher Elizabeth
Loftus, rather than being a complete, correct, unchanging recording,
"Memory works a little bit more like a Wikipedia page." Anyone, including
the original author, can edit the information.
Serious research investigating "false memories" is relatively new. Scholars
Hyman and Billings worked with a group of college students. For this
experiment, first, the students' parents sent stories about some eventful
episodes from their child's youth to the interviewers. Using this family
information, they interviewed each student twice. They mentioned some
actual experiences from the person's childhood; but, for their experiment,
they added a made-up story about an eventful wedding, encouraging the
student to believe the fake wedding had really happened. The following two
sections contain actual conversations from the interviews of one student.
Missing words are indicated by "..."; author's comments by "( )."
Interviewer: I Student: S
First Interview
I: ...looks like an eventful wedding...you were five years old...playing
with some other kids...
(The interviewer, referring to the false event as if the information came
from the student's parent, goes on to say that while playing with friends
the student caused an accident and the bride's parents got all wet.)
S: I don't remember...that's pretty funny...
I: ...seems that would be kind of eventful...
S: ...a wedding. I wonder whose wedding...a wedding reception? I can
totally see myself like running around with other kids...
I: You could see yourself doing that?
S: ...bumping into a table? Oh yeah, I would do that...maybe not a
wedding...like a big picnic...
(The student is starting to believe that bumping into the table sounds
familiar. As they finish, the student is asked to think over the
conversation they had before the next session.)
Second Interview
(The interviewer has just asked about some real events from the student's
childhood and once again returns to the wedding discussed in the previous
session.)
I: The next one I have is an eventful wedding reception at age five.
S: Yeah, I thought about this one...
(The student goes on to describe the people he got wet.)
S: ...I picture him having a dark suit on...tall and big...square face...
I see her in a light-colored dress...
(The student has new images in mind and can tell this story as if it were
an actual memory.)
S: ...near a tree...drinks on the table...I bumped the glasses or
something...
(This student then provides more information on the couple's clothing.)
The students participating in this experiment came to believe that the
false experiences the interviewers planted were absolutely true. By the
second interview some students thought everything previously discussed was
based on information from their parents about real events. This suggests
that, when talking about memories, word choice makes a big difference in
responses. Certain words lead us to recall a situation differently. Because
the interviewer mentioned an "eventful" wedding several times, the student
started having a false memory of this wedding.
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