- Summary
Professor Brian Cutler defines the misinformation effect as the psychological effect of introducing post-event misleading information, which can influence memory.
Have you created a personal profile? sign in or create a profile so that you can create alerts, save clips, playlists and searches.
Cutler, B. (Academic). (2016). Brian Cutler defines misinformation effect [Video]. SAGE Knowledge. https://www.doi.org/10.4135/9781473955912
Cutler, Brian. "Brian Cutler Defines Misinformation Effect." In SAGE Video. London: SAGE Publications Ltd, 2016. Video, 00:00:51. https://www.doi.org/10.4135/9781473955912.
Cutler, B., 2016. Brian Cutler Defines Misinformation Effect, SAGE Video. [Streaming Video] London: SAGE Publications Ltd. Available at: <http://www.doi.org/10.4135/9781473955912> [Accessed 3 Mar 2021].
Cutler, Brian. Brian Cutler Defines Misinformation Effect. Online video clip. SAGE Video. London: SAGE Publications, Ltd., 28 Jan 2016. doi: https://www.doi.org/10.4135/9781473955912. 3 Mar 2021.
copy to clipboardProfessor Brian Cutler defines the misinformation effect as the psychological effect of introducing post-event misleading information, which can influence memory.
We found other relevant content for you on other SAGE platforms.
Have you created a personal profile? Login or create a profile so that you can save clips, playlists and searches
Sign up for a free trial and experience all SAGE Knowledge has to offer.
start free 30 day trialYou must have a valid academic email address to sign up.
Sign up for a free trial and experience all SAGE Knowledge has to offer.
start free 30 day trialYou must have a valid academic email address to sign up.