Answer:
Participants are sometimes mistaken in their recollection of an event's minor details, but do not create an entirely new false memory.
Explanation:
The creation of new false memory happen very often among individuals. Most people tend to interpret new information that exist around us based on our own principles, knowledge, and experience. So, whenever we see new information that does not conform to these, we tend to falsely record that information into our memory so it conform to our principles, knowledge, and experience.
Answer: Dr. Alcott's comments are characteristic of the Cognitive-behavioral models of depression
Explanation: We have Janet as an example: some bad things have happened in her life that have scarred her, making her always go back to them and thinking how life has no purpose, life is not worth living or she feels like she is not good enough for certain things, that she has no luck so her mind is set to that kind of mindset, thinking there is no light at the end of the tunnel.
The individuals with this behavioral model have more tendency to develop depression.
Erm.. If this is true or false.
It's true.
True Because in modern times equil rughts but back then false.