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. 2022 Feb 24;13:837265. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.837265

TABLE 5.

The top 10 cited articles.

Authors Title of the Publication Citations
Ackil and Zaragoza, 1998 Memorial consequences of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories 130
Zaragoza et al., 2001 Interviewing Witnesses: Forced Confabulation and Confirmatory Feedback Increase False Memories 98
Chrobak and Zaragoza, 2008 Inventing stories: Forcing witnesses to fabricate entire fictitious events leads to freely reported false memories 56
Christianson and Bylin, 1999 Does simulating amnesia mediate genuine forgetting for a crime event? 38
Pickel, 2004 When a lie becomes the truth: The effects of self-generated misinformation on eyewitness memory 32
Van Oorsouw and Merckelbach, 2004 Feigning amnesia undermines memory for a mock crime 32
Pezdek et al., 2007 Interviewing witnesses: The effect of forced confabulation on event memory 31
Polage, 2004 Fabrication deflation? The mixed effects of lying on memory 30
Van Oorsouw and Merckelbach, 2006 Simulating amnesia and memories of a mock crime 28
Otgaar and Baker, 2018 When lying changes memory for the truth 27