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Saul M Kassin

Showing results (11-20 of 35) with videos related to

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Law and Human Behavior|May 15, 2004
Why people waive their Miranda rights: the power of innocenceSaul M Kassin, Rebecca J Norwick
Law and Human Behavior|August 25, 2010
Inside interrogation: the lie, the bluff, and false confessionsJennifer T Perillo, Saul M Kassin
Psychological Science|January 21, 2009
On the presumption of evidentiary independence: can confessions corrupt eyewitness identifications?Lisa E Hasel, Saul M Kassin
Psychological Science|December 20, 2011
Confessions that corrupt: evidence from the DNA exoneration case filesSaul M Kassin, Daniel Bogart, Jacqueline Kerner
Journal of Forensic Sciences|August 14, 2020
Forensic Confirmation Bias: Do Jurors Discount Examiners Who Were Exposed to Task-Irrelevant Information?*<sup>,</sup> <sup>†</sup>Jeff Kukucka, Alexa Hiley, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|March 13, 2020
Facts only the perpetrator could have known? A study of contamination in mock crime interrogationsFabiana Alceste, Kristyn A Jones, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|May 8, 2003
Behavioral confirmation in the interrogation room: on the dangers of presuming guiltSaul M Kassin, Christine C Goldstein, Kenneth Savitsky
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|July 26, 2023
The "Partial Innocence" Effect: False Guilty Pleas to Partially Unethical BehaviorsStephanie A Cardenas, Patricia Y Sanchez, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|May 26, 2005
"I'd know a false confession if I saw one": a comparative study of college students and police investigatorsSaul M Kassin, Christian A Meissner, Rebecca J Norwick
Perspectives on Psychological Science : a Journal of the Association for Psychological Science|February 7, 2020
Cumulative Disadvantage: A Psychological Framework for Understanding How Innocence Can Lead to Confession, Wrongful Conviction, and BeyondKyle C Scherr, Allison D Redlich, Saul M Kassin
Pageof 4

Showing results (11-20 of 35) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 4
Law and Human Behavior|May 15, 2004
Why people waive their Miranda rights: the power of innocenceSaul M Kassin, Rebecca J Norwick
Law and Human Behavior|August 25, 2010
Inside interrogation: the lie, the bluff, and false confessionsJennifer T Perillo, Saul M Kassin
Psychological Science|January 21, 2009
On the presumption of evidentiary independence: can confessions corrupt eyewitness identifications?Lisa E Hasel, Saul M Kassin
Psychological Science|December 20, 2011
Confessions that corrupt: evidence from the DNA exoneration case filesSaul M Kassin, Daniel Bogart, Jacqueline Kerner
Journal of Forensic Sciences|August 14, 2020
Forensic Confirmation Bias: Do Jurors Discount Examiners Who Were Exposed to Task-Irrelevant Information?*<sup>,</sup> <sup>†</sup>Jeff Kukucka, Alexa Hiley, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|March 13, 2020
Facts only the perpetrator could have known? A study of contamination in mock crime interrogationsFabiana Alceste, Kristyn A Jones, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|May 8, 2003
Behavioral confirmation in the interrogation room: on the dangers of presuming guiltSaul M Kassin, Christine C Goldstein, Kenneth Savitsky
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|July 26, 2023
The "Partial Innocence" Effect: False Guilty Pleas to Partially Unethical BehaviorsStephanie A Cardenas, Patricia Y Sanchez, Saul M Kassin
Law and Human Behavior|May 26, 2005
"I'd know a false confession if I saw one": a comparative study of college students and police investigatorsSaul M Kassin, Christian A Meissner, Rebecca J Norwick
Perspectives on Psychological Science : a Journal of the Association for Psychological Science|February 7, 2020
Cumulative Disadvantage: A Psychological Framework for Understanding How Innocence Can Lead to Confession, Wrongful Conviction, and BeyondKyle C Scherr, Allison D Redlich, Saul M Kassin
Pageof 4