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G Daniel Lassiter

Showing results (1-10 of 12) with videos related to

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The American Psychologist|November 10, 2010
Psychological science and sound public policy: video recording of custodial interrogationsG Daniel Lassiter
Law and Human Behavior|January 21, 2010
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: what's obvious in hindsight may not be in foresightG Daniel Lassiter
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|March 25, 2009
Dispositional optimism and engagement: the moderating influence of goal prioritizationAndrew L Geers, Justin A Wellman, G Daniel Lassiter
Behavioral Sciences & the Law|April 24, 2009
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: does a dual-camera approach yield unbiased and accurate evaluations?Celeste J Snyder, G Daniel Lassiter, Matthew J Lindberg, et al.
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|September 12, 2006
Gender differences in attitudes toward gay men and lesbians: the role of motivation to respond without prejudiceJennifer J Ratcliff, G Daniel Lassiter, Keith D Markman, et al.
Psychological Science|April 21, 2007
Evaluating videotaped confessions: expertise provides no defense against the camera-perspective effectG Daniel Lassiter, Shari Seidman Diamond, Heather C Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|December 13, 2006
Camera perspective bias in videotaped confessions: experimental evidence of its perceptual basisJennifer J Ratcliff, G Daniel Lassiter, Heather C Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|July 2, 2008
Camera perspective bias in videotaped confessions: evidence that visual attention is a mediatorLezlee J Ware, G Daniel Lassiter, Stephen M Patterson, et al.
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|January 28, 2014
How necessary is the unconscious as a predictive, explanatory, or prescriptive construct?Claudia González-Vallejo, Thomas R Stewart, G Daniel Lassiter, et al.
The Journal of Applied Psychology|October 25, 2002
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: a simple change in camera perspective alters verdicts in simulated trialsG Daniel Lassiter, Andrew L Geers, Ian M Handley, et al.
Pageof 2

Showing results (1-10 of 12) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 2
The American Psychologist|November 10, 2010
Psychological science and sound public policy: video recording of custodial interrogationsG Daniel Lassiter
Law and Human Behavior|January 21, 2010
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: what's obvious in hindsight may not be in foresightG Daniel Lassiter
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|March 25, 2009
Dispositional optimism and engagement: the moderating influence of goal prioritizationAndrew L Geers, Justin A Wellman, G Daniel Lassiter
Behavioral Sciences & the Law|April 24, 2009
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: does a dual-camera approach yield unbiased and accurate evaluations?Celeste J Snyder, G Daniel Lassiter, Matthew J Lindberg, et al.
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|September 12, 2006
Gender differences in attitudes toward gay men and lesbians: the role of motivation to respond without prejudiceJennifer J Ratcliff, G Daniel Lassiter, Keith D Markman, et al.
Psychological Science|April 21, 2007
Evaluating videotaped confessions: expertise provides no defense against the camera-perspective effectG Daniel Lassiter, Shari Seidman Diamond, Heather C Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|December 13, 2006
Camera perspective bias in videotaped confessions: experimental evidence of its perceptual basisJennifer J Ratcliff, G Daniel Lassiter, Heather C Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|July 2, 2008
Camera perspective bias in videotaped confessions: evidence that visual attention is a mediatorLezlee J Ware, G Daniel Lassiter, Stephen M Patterson, et al.
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|January 28, 2014
How necessary is the unconscious as a predictive, explanatory, or prescriptive construct?Claudia González-Vallejo, Thomas R Stewart, G Daniel Lassiter, et al.
The Journal of Applied Psychology|October 25, 2002
Videotaped interrogations and confessions: a simple change in camera perspective alters verdicts in simulated trialsG Daniel Lassiter, Andrew L Geers, Ian M Handley, et al.
Pageof 2