Repressed and Recovered Memory Articles
Engelberg, E., and Christianson, S. (2000). Recall of unpleasant emotion using memory-enhancing principles. Psychology, Crime, and Law, 6, 99-112.
Golding, J. M., Sego, S. A., and Sanchez, R. P. (1999). The effect of multiple childhood sexual assaults on mock-jurors' perceptions of repressed memories. Behavioral Sciencies and the Law, 17, 483-493.
Gordon, J. D. (1998). Admissibility of repressed memory evidence by therapists in sexual abuse cases. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 4, 1198-1225.
Griffith, J. D., Libkuman, T. M., Kazen, J., and Shafir, Z. (1999). Repressed memories in the courtroom: Trial characteristics affecting mock jurors' decision making. American Journal of Forensic Psychology, 17, 5-24.
Loftus, E. F. (1996). The myth of repressed memory and the realities of science. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 3, 356-362.
Loftus, E. F. (1992). When a lie becomes memory's truth: Memory distortion after exposure to misinformation. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 1, 21-23.
Loftus, E. F., and Rosenwald, L. A. (1995). Recovered memories: Unearthing the past in court. Journal of Psychiatry and Law, 23, 3419-361.
Pope, K. S. (1995). What psychologists better know about recovered memories, research, lawsuits, and the pivotal experiment. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 2, 304-315.
Porter, S., Yuille, J. C., and Lehman, D. R. (1999). The nature of real, implanted, and fabricated memories for emotional childhood events: Implications for the recovered memory debate. Law and Human Behavior, 23, 517-537.
Scheflin, A. W., and Brown, D. Repressed memory or dissociative amnesia: What the science says. Journal of Psychiatry and Law, 24, 143-188.

