Previous studies have demonstrated that liars who adopt a false denial strategy often forget what they lied about, which has been labeled the denial-induced forgetting (DIF) effect. However, several investigations have not found such an effect. It has been suggested that involvement might play a role in the inconsistency. The present study was designed to directly determine whether involvement modulates the effects of deception on memory. Participants were assigned randomly to either high- or low-involvement conditions and were required to complete a mock shopping task. They were then asked to participate in an interview in which they were asked to respond honestly or deceptively. Two days later, final memory tests were given, and the parti...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, s...
People sometimes falsely deny having experienced an event. In the current experiments, we examined t...
Can a liar’s memory be trusted? Individuals in forensic settings are often motivated to lie, but to ...
This study examined the effects of lying on the liar’s memory for the truth. Participants first fill...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
Recent studies have demonstrated that lying can affect memory and that such memory effects are based...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
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 (...
In the legal context, it is possible that people decide either to lie about an experienced event or ...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
We examined the mnemonic effects of false denials. In a previous experiment (Otgaar, Howe, Memon, &a...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, s...
People sometimes falsely deny having experienced an event. In the current experiments, we examined t...
Can a liar’s memory be trusted? Individuals in forensic settings are often motivated to lie, but to ...
This study examined the effects of lying on the liar’s memory for the truth. Participants first fill...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
Recent studies have demonstrated that lying can affect memory and that such memory effects are based...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
In two studies, we surveyed the beliefs of undergraduate students (Study 1) and the general public (...
The present experiment aimed to examine how fabrication can affect memory. In particular, we examine...
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 (...
In the legal context, it is possible that people decide either to lie about an experienced event or ...
False denial is a deceptive strategy that requires fewer cognitive resources than other strategies (...
We examined the mnemonic effects of false denials. In a previous experiment (Otgaar, Howe, Memon, &a...
Have you ever told a lie so many times that you came to believe it? The current experiment investig...
In the legal field, victims and offenders frequently lie to avoid talking about serious incidents, s...
People sometimes falsely deny having experienced an event. In the current experiments, we examined t...