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Law and Human Behavior
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May 27, 2016
Blind sequential lineup administration reduces both false identifications and confidence in those false identifications
Steve D Charman, Vanessa Quiroz
Law and Human Behavior
|
April 14, 2006
Eyewitness lineups: is the appearance-change instruction a good idea?
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
April 2, 2008
Can eyewitnesses correct for external influences on their lineup identifications? The actual/counterfactual assessment paradigm
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
October 18, 2021
Pre-identification confidence is related to eyewitness lineup identification accuracy across heterogeneous encoding conditions
Peter F Molinaro, Steve D Charman, Keith Wylie
Law and Human Behavior
|
July 17, 2013
Appearance-change instruction effects on eyewitness lineup identification accuracy are not moderated by amount of appearance change
Peter F Molinaro, Andrea Arndorfer, Steve D Charman
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
March 25, 2009
Exploring the diagnostic utility of facial composites: beliefs of guilt can bias perceived similarity between composite and suspect
Steve D Charman, Amy Hyman Gregory, Marianna Carlucci
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
October 14, 2005
Building face composites can harm lineup identification performance
Gary L Wells, Steve D Charman, Elizabeth A Olson
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
April 25, 2003
Distorted retrospective eyewitness reports as functions of feedback and delay
Gary L Wells, Elizabeth A Olson, Steve D Charman
Law and Human Behavior
|
January 12, 2011
The dud effect: adding highly dissimilar fillers increases confidence in lineup identifications
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells, Stephen W Joy
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
June 23, 2010
The selective cue integration framework: a theory of postidentification witness confidence assessment
Steve D Charman, Marianna Carlucci, Jon Vallano, et al.
Page
of 2
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 13) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 2
Law and Human Behavior
|
May 27, 2016
Blind sequential lineup administration reduces both false identifications and confidence in those false identifications
Steve D Charman, Vanessa Quiroz
Law and Human Behavior
|
April 14, 2006
Eyewitness lineups: is the appearance-change instruction a good idea?
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
April 2, 2008
Can eyewitnesses correct for external influences on their lineup identifications? The actual/counterfactual assessment paradigm
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells
Law and Human Behavior
|
October 18, 2021
Pre-identification confidence is related to eyewitness lineup identification accuracy across heterogeneous encoding conditions
Peter F Molinaro, Steve D Charman, Keith Wylie
Law and Human Behavior
|
July 17, 2013
Appearance-change instruction effects on eyewitness lineup identification accuracy are not moderated by amount of appearance change
Peter F Molinaro, Andrea Arndorfer, Steve D Charman
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
March 25, 2009
Exploring the diagnostic utility of facial composites: beliefs of guilt can bias perceived similarity between composite and suspect
Steve D Charman, Amy Hyman Gregory, Marianna Carlucci
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
October 14, 2005
Building face composites can harm lineup identification performance
Gary L Wells, Steve D Charman, Elizabeth A Olson
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
April 25, 2003
Distorted retrospective eyewitness reports as functions of feedback and delay
Gary L Wells, Elizabeth A Olson, Steve D Charman
Law and Human Behavior
|
January 12, 2011
The dud effect: adding highly dissimilar fillers increases confidence in lineup identifications
Steve D Charman, Gary L Wells, Stephen W Joy
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
|
June 23, 2010
The selective cue integration framework: a theory of postidentification witness confidence assessment
Steve D Charman, Marianna Carlucci, Jon Vallano, et al.
Page
of 2