![gals panic 2 semi-nude setting gals panic 2 semi-nude setting](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/aolwikKqnh4/maxresdefault.jpg)
When memory serves as evidence, as it does in many civil and criminal legal proceedings, there are a number of important limitations to the veracity of that evidence. The science of memory is as central to the law as biology is to medicine. Finally, we consider the way in which the research on memory (true and false) has been successfully integrated into some courtroom procedures. We revisit some of the prominent trials of the 1980s and 1990s to not only consider the role false memories have played in judicial decisions, but also to see how this has helped us understand memory today. We present a brief historical overview of false memories that focuses on three critical forensic areas that changed memory research: children as eyewitnesses, historic sexual abuse and eyewitness (mis)identification. But what lessons have we learned, some 35 years later, about the role of memory in the judicial system? In this review, we focus on what we now know about the consequences of the fallibility of memory for legal proceedings.
![gals panic 2 semi-nude setting gals panic 2 semi-nude setting](https://www.usmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Britney-Spears-Celebrates-Nude-with-Sam-Asghari-After-Conservatorship-Hearing-Win-2.jpg)
Prominent legal cases of the 1980s and 1990s sparked lengthy debates and important research questions surrounding the fallibility and general reliability of memory. The capability of adult and child witnesses to accurately recollect events from the past and provide reliable testimony has been hotly debated for more than 100 years.