In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, such as past experiences of sexual abuse or criminal involvement. Although these individuals may initially lie about an experienced event, oftentimes these same people eventually abandon their lies and are forthcoming with what truly happened. To date, it is unclear whether such lying affects later statements about one's memory for the experienced event. The impetus of the present review is to compile the current state of knowledge on the effects of lying on memory. Based on existing literature, we will describe how deceptive strategies (e.g., false denials) regarding what is remembered may affect memory in consequential ways, such as forgetti...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
Victims of abuse might deny their traumatic experiences. We studied mnemonic effects of simulating f...
In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, s...
In the legal context, it is possible that people decide either to lie about an experienced event or ...
Can a liar’s memory be trusted? Individuals in forensic settings are often motivated to lie, but to ...
Recent studies have demonstrated that lying can affect memory and that such memory effects are based...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
Research suggests that both internal (i.e., lying) and external (i.e., misinformation) factors can a...
In the current experiment, we were interested in the effects of lying (i.e. false denial or fabricat...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
This study examined the effects of lying on the liar’s memory for the truth. Participants first fill...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
Victims of abuse might deny their traumatic experiences. We studied mnemonic effects of simulating f...
In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, s...
In the legal context, it is possible that people decide either to lie about an experienced event or ...
Can a liar’s memory be trusted? Individuals in forensic settings are often motivated to lie, but to ...
Recent studies have demonstrated that lying can affect memory and that such memory effects are based...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
Research suggests that both internal (i.e., lying) and external (i.e., misinformation) factors can a...
In the current experiment, we were interested in the effects of lying (i.e. false denial or fabricat...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
This study examined the effects of lying on the liar’s memory for the truth. Participants first fill...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
Victims of abuse might deny their traumatic experiences. We studied mnemonic effects of simulating f...