| Literature DB >> 35282235 |
Fabiana Battista1, Henry Otgaar1,2.
Abstract
Research on the effects of lying and memory is increasingly attracting empirical attention. In the current manuscript, a scientometric analysis was carried out on the mnemonic consequences of lying. This analysis took into account 70 published articles extracted from Scopus and Web of Science databases from 1998 to 2021. A scientometric analysis was conducted in order to visualize the state of the art on this line of research (i.e., authors, countries, institutions, journals, and co-citations). Additionally, a keywords' cluster analysis was executed to investigate the main keywords used in the published papers. Based on the keywords' cluster analysis, we identified the main aims and critical issues of the reviewed papers. The United States and the Netherlands are the two most productive countries into the effects of lying on memory. The top five authors are mainly from European countries and wrote from 6 to 15 articles. The cluster analysis detected three clusters of keywords. The critical issues of this line of research are mainly related to the generalizability of the achieved findings for real situations, a lack of a direct control of the manipulation adopted, and a need of additional measures. The current analysis provides a comprehensive overview and understanding of existing research on the effects of lying on memory and provides possible future directions of this research domain.Entities:
Keywords: future direction; lying; memory; review; scientometric analyses
Year: 2022 PMID: 35282235 PMCID: PMC8907922 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.837265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1The PRISMA chart showing the selection of the publications.
Number of publications on the effects of lying on memory by country.
| Country | Number of Publications | SCP | MCP |
| United States | 28 | 25 | 3 |
| Netherlands | 19 | 4 | 15 |
| United Kingdom | 10 | 4 | 6 |
| Belgium | 10 | 0 | 10 |
| Italy | 9 | 1 | 8 |
| Sweden | 5 | 3 | 2 |
| France | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| China | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Canada | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Germany | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Israel | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Russia | 1 | 1 | 0 |
SCP indicates Single Country Publications and MCP, Multiple Country Publications. Publications having the first author affiliated to different countries were counted as many times as countries of affiliations.
FIGURE 2Number of publications by country and by year for all the twelve countries and total number of publications by year from 1998 to 2021.
Number of publications on the effects of lying on memory by source and total global citation scores (TGCS).
| Journal | Number of Publications | TGCS |
| Acta Psychologica | 5 | 52 |
| American Journal of Forensic Psychology | 1 | 1 |
| American Journal of Psychology | 2 | 17 |
| Applied Cognitive Psychology | 12 | 185 |
| Behavioral Sciences and The Law | 2 | 22 |
| Brain and Cognition | 1 | 2 |
| Cognition | 1 | 2 |
| Developmental Psychology | 1 | 120 |
| Europes Journal of Psychology | 1 | 4 |
| Frontiers in Psychology | 3 | 13 |
| Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition | 4 | 58 |
| Journal of Experimental Psychology-General | 1 | 18 |
| Journal of Experimental Psychology-Learning, Memory, and Cognition | 1 | 2 |
| Journal of General Psychology | 1 | 0 |
| Law and Human Behavior | 3 | 51 |
| Legal and Criminological Psychology | 4 | 69 |
| Memory | 8 | 57 |
| Memory and Cognition | 7 | 116 |
| Psychological Research | 2 | 53 |
| Psychological Science | 1 | 73 |
| Psychology and Law | 1 | 0 |
| Psychology, Crime, and Law | 4 | 36 |
| Psychonomic Bulletin and Review | 1 | 48 |
| Quartery Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2 | 10 |
Number of publications on the effects lying on memory by institution, country, number of publications, total global citation scores (TGCS), and total citations per year (TCpY).
| Institutes | Country | Publications | TGCS | TCpY |
| Ball State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 25 | 1.79 |
| Bar-Ilan University | ISRAEL | 1 | 12 | 3.00 |
| Bilkent University | TURKEY | 1 | 3 | 0.43 |
| Brandeis University | UNITED STATES | 2 | 3 | 0.43 |
| Catholic University of Leuven | BELGIUM | 10 | 31 | 15.5 |
| Maastricht University | NETHERLANDS | 19 | 199 | 11.71 |
| Central Washington University | UNITED STATES | 3 | 34 | 3.78 |
| City University of New York | UNITED STATES | 1 | 3 | 0.75 |
| Claremont Graduate University | UNITED STATES | 3 | 60 | 6.67 |
| Emporia State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 17 | 8.50 |
| Friedrich Schiller University Jena | GERMANY | 1 | 1 | 0.50 |
| Gustavus Adolphus College | UNITED STATES | 1 | 120 | 5.22 |
| Kennesaw State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Kent State University | UNITED STATES | 4 | 161 | 8.05 |
| Lomonosov Moscow State University | RUSSIA | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Louisiana State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 19 | 3.17 |
| City University of London | UNITED KINGDOM | 5 | 68 | 13.6 |
| Gothenburg University | SWEDEN | 2 | 15 | 5.00 |
| McGill University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 4 | 1.34 |
| Montana State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 45 | 15.00 |
| Pepperdine University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 30 | 1.76 |
| Saint Martin’s University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 5 | 0.84 |
| Southern Connecticut State University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Southern New Hampshire University | UNITED STATES | 2 | 17 | 0.95 |
| Stockholm University | SWEDEN | 3 | 60 | 2.73 |
| Tianjin Normal University | CHINA | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| University of Aberdeen | UNITED KINGDOM | 2 | 59 | 4.54 |
| University of Bari Aldo Moro | ITALY | 8 | 32 | 8.00 |
| University of California Davis | UNITED STATES | 1 | 18 | 2.57 |
| University of Denver | UNITED STATES | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| University of Lille | FRANCE | 3 | 63 | 15.75 |
| University of North Carolina | UNITED STATES | 1 | 13 | 1.45 |
| University of Portsmouth | UNITED KINGDOM | 4 | 26 | 6.50 |
| University of Rome La Sapienza | ITALY | 1 | 2 | 1.00 |
| Wesleyan University | UNITED STATES | 1 | 15 | 1.25 |
Publications having the first author affiliated to different institutions were counted as many times as institutions of affiliations.
Number of single, multi, and first-authored publications on the effects of lying on memory by the 10 most productive authors.
| Author | Total Publications | Single-Authored | Multi-Authored | First-Authored | Percentage (%) |
| Ackil, J.K. | 3 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 4.29 |
| Battista, F. | 6 | 0 | 6 | 4 | 8.57 |
| Bylin, S. | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4.29 |
| Harvey, A.C. | 3 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 4.29 |
| Mangiulli, I. | 13 | 0 | 13 | 5 | 18.57 |
| Otgaar, H. | 15 | 0 | 15 | 5 | 21.43 |
| Pezdek, K. | 3 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 4.29 |
| Polage, D.C. | 4 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 5.71 |
| Riesthuis, P. | 4 | 0 | 4 | 3 | 5.71 |
| Romeo, T. | 3 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 4.29 |
| Van Oorsouw, K. | 8 | 0 | 8 | 4 | 11.43 |
| Zaragoza, M.S. | 7 | 0 | 7 | 1 | 10.00 |
Percentage was calculated by considering all authors’ contributions in the revised publications. Moreover, the list consists of 12 authors because Ackil, J.K., Pezdek, K., and Romeo, T. had the same performance.
FIGURE 3The co-authorship network.
The top 10 cited articles.
| Authors | Title of the Publication | Citations |
|
| Memorial consequences of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories | 130 |
|
| Interviewing Witnesses: Forced Confabulation and Confirmatory Feedback Increase False Memories | 98 |
|
| Inventing stories: Forcing witnesses to fabricate entire fictitious events leads to freely reported false memories | 56 |
|
| Does simulating amnesia mediate genuine forgetting for a crime event? | 38 |
|
| When a lie becomes the truth: The effects of self-generated misinformation on eyewitness memory | 32 |
|
| Feigning amnesia undermines memory for a mock crime | 32 |
|
| Interviewing witnesses: The effect of forced confabulation on event memory | 31 |
|
| Fabrication deflation? The mixed effects of lying on memory | 30 |
|
| Simulating amnesia and memories of a mock crime | 28 |
|
| When lying changes memory for the truth | 27 |
The 10 most cited authors.
| Author | Number of Citations | TLS |
| Ackil, J. K. | 192 | 2.00 |
| Bylin, S. | 61 | 2.00 |
| Christianson, K. A. | 55 | 2.00 |
| Chrobak, Q. M. | 65 | 2.00 |
| Mangiulli, I. | 36 | 13.00 |
| Otgaar, H. | 98 | 15.00 |
| Polage, D. C. | 64 | 0.00 |
| Pzedek, K. | 60 | 3.00 |
| Van Oorsouw, K. | 114 | 8.00 |
| Zaragoza, M. S. | 303 | 6.00 |
The table shows the number of citations and the Total Link Strength (TLS) by author.
The top 10 co-cited articles.
| Authors | Title of the Publication | Co-citations |
|
| Memorial consequences of forced confabulation: Age differences in susceptibility to false memories | 8 |
|
| How you lie affects what you remember | 6 |
|
| Interviewing Witnesses: Forced Confabulation and Confirmatory Feedback Increase False Memories | 6 |
|
| Inventing stories: Forcing witnesses to fabricate entire fictitious events leads to freely reported false memories | 5 |
|
| Feigning amnesia undermines memory for a mock crime | 5 |
|
| Does feigning amnesia impair subsequent recall? | 5 |
|
| Fabrication inflation increases as source monitoring ability decreases | 4 |
|
| Suppressing unwanted memories by executive control | 4 |
|
| A social-cognitive framework for understanding serious lies: Activation-decision-construction-action theory | 4 |
|
| Source monitoring. | 4 |
FIGURE 4Authors’ co-citation network.
FIGURE 5The authors’ keywords network.
Keywords and their occurrences, links, and total link strength (TLS) for the three detected clusters.
| Cluster | Keywords | Occurrences | Links | TLS |
| 1 | Denial-Induced Forgetting | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| 1 | False Denial | 6 | 4 | 5 |
| 1 | False memory | 9 | 5 | 6 |
| 2 | Deception | 10 | 5 | 8 |
| 2 | Fabrication | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| 2 | Forgetting | 5 | 5 | 4 |
| 3 | Lying | 10 | 3 | 9 |
| 3 | Memory | 20 | 6 | 16 |
FIGURE 6The authors’ keywords network considering the influence of time.
Information of the selected publications for the critical review.
| Authors and Year | Title | Aim | Deceptive Strategy | Stimulus | Memory Task | Significance of the Results | Limitations |
|
| What Can We Remember After Complex Denials? The Impact Of Different False Denials On Memory | Test the effects of two different cognitively demanding false denials on memory | False Denials | Video | Recognition and Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Lack of test for the cognitive manipulation - Only one strategy - Only witness perspective |
|
| The Effects Of Repeated Denials And Fabrication On Memory | Test the effect of repeated lying on memory | False Denials and Fabrication | Video | Recognition and Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Feigned Amnesia not tested - Mechanisms Underpinning not studied |
|
| Do Liars Really Remember What They Lied Upon? The Impact Of Fabrication On Memory | Test the effects of two different cognitively demanding fabrication on memory | Fabrication | Video | Recognition and Cued Recall | Yes | - Memory task used in the pilot study different from the one of the main study - No replication of prior findings on beliefs’ rating |
|
| The Role Of Executive Functions In The Effects Of Lying On Memory | The role of individual executive functions resources in the effects of lying on memory | False Denials and Fabrication | Video | Recognition and Cued Recall | Yes | nd |
|
| Generating Lies Produces Lower Memory Predictions and Higher Memory Performance Than Telling the Truth: Evidence for a Metacognitive Illusion | Test a lie-generation manipulation on both actual and predicted memory performance | Fabrication | General Events List | Free Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| When Forced Fabrications Become Truth: Causal Explanations and False Memory Development | Test how the formation of false memory can happen due to fabrication | Fabrication | Video | Free Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for other deceptive strategies |
|
| Forced confabulation affects memory sensitivity as well as response bias | Test how forced confabulation affect memory for the actual event | Fabrication | Video | Cued Recall | Yes | nd |
|
| A Stability Bias Effect Among Deceivers | Test the memory for the event and stability bias | Fabrication | Action | Free Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| Deception and Decay: Verbal Lie Detection as a Function of Delay and Encoding Quality | Test how encoding quality and retention interval affect memory after lying | Fabrication | Video and Action | Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Cognitively simple situation of lying |
|
| Involvement Modulates the Effects of Deception on Memory in Daily Life | Test DIF effect with a daily life paradigm | False Denial | Action | Source Monitoring | Yes | - Generalization of the findings due to the sample composition |
|
| Do Reminders Of The Crime Reverse The Memory-Undermining Effect Of Simulating Amnesia? | Test whether reminders about the lied event reverse the memory-undermining effect of feigned amnesia | Feigned Amnesia | Video | Free and Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Lack of test for the manipulation adopted - Not adopted different memory tasks |
|
| Retrieval-Induced Forgetting in the Feigning Amnesia for a Crime Paradigm | Test whether retrieval-induced forgetting underlies the memory-undermining effect of feigned amnesia | Feigned Amnesia | Video | Free Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Lack of test of the manipulation adopted |
|
| Feigning Amnesia Moderately Impairs Memory for a Mock Crime Video | Test the effects of feigned amnesia adopting a video | Feigned Amnesia | Video | Free and Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - No comparison of different stimuli - Not clear whether participants mixed deceptive strategies - Need to use questionnaire to assess cognitive functions |
|
| Memory For Child Sexual Abuse Information: Simulated Memory Error And Individual Differences | Test the effects of simulated memory (i.e., false denied or fabricated details) error on memory for CSA information | False Denials and Fabrication | Narrative | Free and Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Lack of control for the adopted memory tasks |
|
| When Lying Changes Memory For The Truth | Review literature on the effects of lying and memory | False Denials, Feigned Amnesia, and Fabrication | nd | nd | nd | - Lack of studies |
|
| The Impact Of False Denials On Forgetting And False Memory | Test the effect of false denials on forgetting and false memory formation | False Denials | Word Lists | Free Recall or Source Monitoring | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| Denial-Induced Forgetting: False Denials Undermine Memory, But External Denials Undermine Belief | Test the effects of false denials on memory | False Denials | Pictures and Video | Source Monitoring | Yes | nd |
|
| Forgetting Having Denied: The Amnesic Consequences Of Denial | Test the DIF effect for different memory tasks | False Denials | Video | Free Recall or Source Monitoring | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| Influence Of Age On The Effects Of Lying On Memory | Test the effects of lying considering the role of cognitive control | False Denials and Fabrication | Action | Recognition | Yes | - Lack of test of the measure adopted |
|
| Evaluating Heart Rate Variability As A Predictor Of The Influence Of Lying On Memory | Test whether heart rate variability is involved in the effects of lying one memory | False Denials and Fabrication | Action | Recognition | Yes | - Not adopted different individual differences measures - Need to use physiological measures |
|
| Interviewing Witnesses: The Effect Of Forced Confabulation On Event Memory | Test whether forced confabulation can increase the recall of details never occurred | Fabrication | Video | Cued Recall | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| The Effect of Telling Lies on Belief in the Truth | Test the effects of lying on beliefs in the memory for the truth | Fabrication | Events List | Belief Rating | Yes | - Need of more control on the manipulation adopted - Mechanisms Underpinning not studied |
|
| Fabrication Inflation Increases As Source Monitoring Ability Decreases | Test the effects of lying on beliefs in a false childhood event | Fabrication | Events List | Belief Rating | Yes | - Mechanisms Underpinning not studied |
|
| Liar, Liar: Consistent Lying Decreases Belief In The Truth | Test the effects of lying on beliefs in participants’ childhood events | False Denials | Events List | Belief Rating | Yes | - Lack of direct measure of memory for the event - Lack of control of the manipulation adopted |
|
| Public Beliefs On The Relationship Between Lying And Memory | Survey beliefs of students and general public on the effects of lying and memory | False Denials, Feigned Amnesia, and Fabrication | nd | nd | nd | nd |
|
| Registered Report: The Effects Of Incentivized Lies On Memory | Test the effect of deceptive behavior on memory | Fabrication | Action | Cued Recall | nd | nd |
|
| Adopting A Fictitious Autobiography: Fabrication Inflation Or Deflation? | Test whether adopting a fictitious biography make participants believe in the fake autobiography | Fabrication | Biography | Belief Rating | no | - Generalization of the findings |
|
| The Impact Of Lying About A Traumatic Virtual Reality Experience On Memory | Test the effects of lying in a virtual reality paradigm | False Denials and Fabrication | Virtual Reality Scenes | Source Monitoring | Yes | nd |
|
| The Memory-Impairing Effects Of Simulated Amnesia For A Mock Crime | Test the memory undermining effect for crime-related details | False Denials and Feigned Amnesia | Action | Source Monitoring | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Lack of control on the manipulation adopted |
|
| Long-Lasting Positive Effects Of Collaborative Remembering On False Assents To Misleading Questions | Test the effects of collaborative remembering on the recall of self-generated details | Fabrication | Video | Free Recall and Recognition | No | - Need of different manipulations |
|
| Minimizing Culpability Increases Commission Errors In A Mock Crime Paradigm | Test whether minimizing culpability undermines memory for the original event lied upon | Fabrication | Action | Free Recall | Yes | - Need of extra check on the manipulation adopted |
|
| How You Lie Affects What You Remember | Test how false denials affects memory | False Denials | Pictures | Source Monitoring | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations |
|
| How Deception And Believability Feedback Affect Recall | Test whether fabricating details and receiving believability feedback impacts memory | Fabrication | Pictures | Recognition | Yes | - Generalization of the findings for real situations - Need of extra check on the manipulation adopted |
*Due to the nature of both the studies (i.e., review and survey), it was not possible to report some of the information displayed in the table. “nd” means “no data.”