Expert warns Brent Hawkes’ gross indecency trial about ‘imagination inflation’
KENTVILLE, N.S. — The nature and fallibility of memory was the focus of Brent Hawkes’ gross indecency trial on Monday, in a case that has seen witnesses recounting events that happened more than 40 years ago.
Timothy Moore, chair of the psychology department at York University’s Glendon College, testified that it is not uncommon for people with gaps in their memories to unconsciously insert memories and adopt them as real.
“Memories can undergo a substantial amount of modification over time and the longer the time, the more opportunity for misinformation to occur,” Moore, an expert witness who was called by the defence, said in a courtroom in Kentville, N.S.
He spoke about “imagination inflation,” a phenomenon in which someone imagines an event in their mind and over time believes it to be true. Moore said it is not uncommon and can be self-generated.


