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Matthew A Palmer

Showing results (1-10 of 38) with videos related to

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Law and Human Behavior|June 7, 2012
Sequential lineup presentation promotes less-biased criterion setting but does not improve discriminabilityMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : an Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law|May 13, 2022
How downplaying or exaggerating crime severity in a confession affects perceived guiltGlenys A Holt, Matthew A Palmer
Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : an Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law|December 16, 2024
Individual attitudes toward coerced confessions change perception of confession evidence: why jurors may accept or reject poor-quality confessionsGlenys A Holt, Matthew A Palmer
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|January 5, 2011
Postidentification feedback affects subsequent eyewitness identification performanceMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Nathan Weber
Law and Human Behavior|April 4, 2012
The information gained from witnesses' responses to an initial "blank" lineupMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Nathan Weber
Acta Psychologica|February 21, 2013
Understanding gender bias in face recognition: effects of divided attention at encodingMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Ruth Horry
Child Development|November 3, 2025
Capital Gains: Effects of Word Class and Sentence Position on Capitalization Use Across AgeEmilia Hawkey, Matthew A Palmer, Nenagh Kemp
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|August 29, 2012
Backloading in the sequential lineup prevents within-lineup criterion shifts that undermine eyewitness identification performanceRuth Horry, Matthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Law and Human Behavior|February 14, 2017
Mock-juror evaluations of traditional and ratings-based eyewitness identification evidenceJames D Sauer, Matthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Royal Society Open Science|October 6, 2016
Enhancing endorsement of scientific inquiry increases support for pro-environment policiesAaron Drummond, Matthew A Palmer, James D Sauer
Pageof 4

Showing results (1-10 of 38) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 4
Law and Human Behavior|June 7, 2012
Sequential lineup presentation promotes less-biased criterion setting but does not improve discriminabilityMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : an Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law|May 13, 2022
How downplaying or exaggerating crime severity in a confession affects perceived guiltGlenys A Holt, Matthew A Palmer
Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : an Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law|December 16, 2024
Individual attitudes toward coerced confessions change perception of confession evidence: why jurors may accept or reject poor-quality confessionsGlenys A Holt, Matthew A Palmer
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|January 5, 2011
Postidentification feedback affects subsequent eyewitness identification performanceMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Nathan Weber
Law and Human Behavior|April 4, 2012
The information gained from witnesses' responses to an initial "blank" lineupMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Nathan Weber
Acta Psychologica|February 21, 2013
Understanding gender bias in face recognition: effects of divided attention at encodingMatthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer, Ruth Horry
Child Development|November 3, 2025
Capital Gains: Effects of Word Class and Sentence Position on Capitalization Use Across AgeEmilia Hawkey, Matthew A Palmer, Nenagh Kemp
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied|August 29, 2012
Backloading in the sequential lineup prevents within-lineup criterion shifts that undermine eyewitness identification performanceRuth Horry, Matthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Law and Human Behavior|February 14, 2017
Mock-juror evaluations of traditional and ratings-based eyewitness identification evidenceJames D Sauer, Matthew A Palmer, Neil Brewer
Royal Society Open Science|October 6, 2016
Enhancing endorsement of scientific inquiry increases support for pro-environment policiesAaron Drummond, Matthew A Palmer, James D Sauer
Pageof 4