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Henry Otgaar is a professor at Maastricht University in The Netherlands in Legal Psychology and Neuroscience in Forensic Psychology[1] as well as a professor of research at the Leuven Institute of Criminology in Belgium.[2] Additionally, Dr. Otgaar is involved and a seen as a fellow at the City University London and Center of Memory and Law.[3] An area he has contributed most to with his research is around many differernt ideas and development of memory.[4] Some areas he specializes in is developmental differences in memory, false memory development, trauma and memory, children and adolescent interrogation, and the evolution of memory.[4]
Education
editIn 2001 till 2005 Otgaar focused his studies at Maastricht University in Psychology, Neuropsychology, Psychology and Law. Otgaar competed his PhD (Cum Laude) from 2006-2009 at Maastricht. To finish his education Otgaar from 2009-2011 completed his post doc at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University.[5]
Career
editOtgaar has spent much of his time at Maastricht University. In 2002 Otgaar was a tutor at the University, from 2005 to 2006 he was a teaching assistant on the Faculty of Psychology at Maastricht, onto pursuing his PhD in 2006 and graduating Cum Laude in 2009.[5] While completeing his PhD at University Dr. Otgaar also became an expert witness for the Maastricht Forensic Institute in 2006,[5] and has devoted much research to the reliability of expert witnesses and memory in court.[6] While finishing his education Otgaar found a specific area in psychology combined with neuroscience where he has dedicated the majority of his research to. Otgaar now primarily focuses on the development of memory and the mechanisms that pertains to memory, his niche, however, is the development of false memories.[7]
Research
editOtgaar has researched repressed memories from psychological trauma,[8] the susceptibility of creating false memories in survival processing,[9] how children may be more resistant to false memory susceptibility,[10] the development of non-believed memories,[11] and what drives the creation of false memories in humans.[12] He perhaps is best known for his work in the developmental changes that occur in memory from childhood all the way till adolescence.[13] Otgaar pays special attention to how the development of memory can be influenced by environmental factors like stress, trauma, and human susceptibility.[12]
In one of his most cited articles, Otgaar explains and studies the idea of repressed memories, what causes them and how the psychological culture has changed towards the idea of repressed memory development in adults.[8] This article questions whether past psychological trauma,[8] whether someone is consciously aware of the trauma or not, could cause someone to forgot a complete autobiographical memory.[8] Repressed memories have been a topic of discussion amongst the psychological, clinical, and legal settings for years, but Otgaar and his team dove deeper into previous research to derive reasons why repressed memories could exist. Otgaar found three reasons why repressed memories are able to develop in humans: retrieval inhibition, motivated forgetting, and the relation between trauma and dissociation.[8] Backing off of repressed memories Otgaar goes further to explain the existence of non-believed memories in adults or even children.[11] This is a rare psychological phenomenon, but alas still exists and happens when someone does not believe an autobiographical memory happened even when recollective features of the memory are present.[11] His research in this study also supports the idea that non believed memories occur more due to high rates of susceptibility and persuasion.[11]
His work with repressed memories also leads into another area that Otgaar has dedicated much of his research towards, false memory recall. Past research has taught us that when in a survival situation your senses are heightened,[9] therefore your memory recall should be higher as well.[9] Otgaar and his team wanted to test whether or not children are less susceptible than adults to false memory recall in a survival scenario.[9] After conducting the study it was learned that whether placed in a survival situation, a pleasant situation, or moving scenario there was no edge in survival recall,[9] and false memories were still produced. However, though Otgaar found an increase in the creation of false memories in a survival scenario,[9] it also allowed both adults and children to have a better true recall advantage in the study.[9] Otgaar, also being an expert witness[5] and clinical psychologist,[5] has much experience within a court and clinical settings on the development of false memories. Though a survival scenario might increase the odds of developing a false memory,[9] Otgaar stresses the importance of knowing what psychological ailments could also induce false memory recall in humans.[12] His research found and supported the idea that individuals with a history of depression, PTSD, and or even trauma are at a higher risk for developing false memories.[12] Otgaar found that when emotional information is presented to person's specific knowledge base, they too are at higher risk for developing false memories.[12]
Awards
editOtgaar, still developing and growing his career, has already won many accomplishments within the psychological world, including the Early Career Award presented by the European Association of Psychology and Law.[14]
Books
edit- Otgaar, Henry, and Mark L. Howe (eds), Finding the Truth in the Courtroom: Dealing with Deception, Lies, and Memories (New York, 2017; online edn, Oxford Academic, 19 Oct. 2017), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190612016.001.0001, accessed 26 Sept. 2024
References
edit- ^ "Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Maastricht University". www.maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ "KU Leuven who's who – Henry Otgaar". www.kuleuven.be. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
- ^ "BIO". henryotgaar. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ a b "Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Maastricht University". www.maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ a b c d e "BIO". henryotgaar. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ Otgaar, Henry; Howe, Mark L; Dodier, Olivier (2023). "Realistic guidelines on expert witness work concerning memory" (PDF). Mind and Law. 4: 100117. doi:10.1016/j.fsiml.2023.100117.
- ^ "Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Dr Henry Otgaar (H.P.) - Maastricht University". www.maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ a b c d e Otgaar, Henry; Howe, Mark L.; Patihis, Lawrence; Merckelbach, Harald; Lynn, Steven Jay; Lilienfeld, Scott O.; Loftus, Elizabeth F. (November 2019). "The Return of the Repressed: The Persistent and Problematic Claims of Long-Forgotten Trauma". Perspectives on Psychological Science. 14 (6): 1072–1095. doi:10.1177/1745691619862306. ISSN 1745-6916. PMC 6826861. PMID 31584864.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Otgaar, Henry (2010). "Adaptive Memory: Survival Processing Increases Both True and False Memory in Adults and Children".
- ^ ottar, Henry (2016). "The Malleability of Developmental Trends in Neutral and Negative Memory Illusions".
- ^ a b c d Otgaar, Henry (October 15, 2014). "On the Existence and Implications of Nonbelieved Memories". Current Directions in Psychological Science. 23 (5): 349–354. doi:10.1177/0963721414542102.
- ^ a b c d e Otgaar, Henry; Muris, Peter; Howe, Mark L.; Merckelbach, Harald (November 2017). "What Drives False Memories in Psychopathology? A Case for Associative Activation". Clinical Psychological Science. 5 (6): 1048–1069. doi:10.1177/2167702617724424. ISSN 2167-7026. PMC 5665161. PMID 29170722.
- ^ "Henry Otgaar | In-Mind authors". www.in-mind.org. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
- ^ "Awards – EAPL". Retrieved 2024-10-19.