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Law and Human Behavior
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July 5, 2007
Field experiments on eyewitness identification: towards a better understanding of pitfalls and prospects
Gary L Wells
The American Psychologist
|
December 31, 2020
Psychological science on eyewitness identification and its impact on police practices and policies
Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
January 17, 2004
Murder, extramarital affairs, and the issue of probative value
Gary L Wells
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
March 16, 2006
The confidence-accuracy relationship in eyewitness identification: effects of lineup instructions, foil similarity, and target-absent base rates
Neil Brewer, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
December 18, 2013
Post-identification feedback to eyewitnesses impairs evaluators' abilities to discriminate between accurate and mistaken testimony
Laura Smalarz, Gary L Wells
Memory & Cognition
|
May 27, 2005
Not the same old hindsight bias: outcome information distorts a broad range of retrospective judgments
Amy Bradfield, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
April 9, 2014
Confirming feedback following a mistaken identification impairs memory for the culprit
Laura Smalarz, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
July 24, 2018
Fillers can help control for contextual bias in forensic comparison tasks
Adele Quigley-McBride, Gary L Wells
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
|
July 27, 2018
Is the Attitude-Attribution Paradigm Suitable for Investigating the Dispositional Bias?
Edward F Wright, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
May 15, 2004
What makes a good alibi? A proposed taxonomy
Elizabeth A Olson, Gary L Wells
Page
of 5
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 48) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 5
Law and Human Behavior
|
July 5, 2007
Field experiments on eyewitness identification: towards a better understanding of pitfalls and prospects
Gary L Wells
The American Psychologist
|
December 31, 2020
Psychological science on eyewitness identification and its impact on police practices and policies
Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
January 17, 2004
Murder, extramarital affairs, and the issue of probative value
Gary L Wells
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
March 16, 2006
The confidence-accuracy relationship in eyewitness identification: effects of lineup instructions, foil similarity, and target-absent base rates
Neil Brewer, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
December 18, 2013
Post-identification feedback to eyewitnesses impairs evaluators' abilities to discriminate between accurate and mistaken testimony
Laura Smalarz, Gary L Wells
Memory & Cognition
|
May 27, 2005
Not the same old hindsight bias: outcome information distorts a broad range of retrospective judgments
Amy Bradfield, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
April 9, 2014
Confirming feedback following a mistaken identification impairs memory for the culprit
Laura Smalarz, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
July 24, 2018
Fillers can help control for contextual bias in forensic comparison tasks
Adele Quigley-McBride, Gary L Wells
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
|
July 27, 2018
Is the Attitude-Attribution Paradigm Suitable for Investigating the Dispositional Bias?
Edward F Wright, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
May 15, 2004
What makes a good alibi? A proposed taxonomy
Elizabeth A Olson, Gary L Wells
Page
of 5