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 |