Eyewitness
Testimony |
Publications |
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Hasel & Kassin (2009). On the presumption of evidentiary independence: Can confessions corrupt eyewitness identifications? Psychological Science. |
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Kassin, Tubb,
Hosch, & Memon (2002). Eyewitness experts in court:
Responsive to change in a dynamic and
rational process. American Psychologist. |
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Kassin,
Tubb, Hosch, & Memon
(2001). On the "general acceptance" of eyewitness testimony
research: A new survey of the
experts. American Psychologist. |
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Kassin
(1998). Eyewitness identification
procedures: The fifth rule. Law
and Human Behavior. |
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Kassin, Ellsworth, & Smith
(1994). Deja vu all over again:
Elliott's critique of eyewitness
experts. Law and Human Behavior. |
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Kassin & Barndollar
(1992). On the psychology of eyewitness testimony: A comparison
of experts and prospective jurors. Journal
of Applied Social Psychology. |
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Kassin,
Rigby, & Castillo (1991). The
accuracy confidence correlation
in eyewitness testimony: Limits
and extensions of the retrospective
self awareness effect. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology. |
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Kassin,
Ellsworth, & Smith
(1989). The "general acceptance" of psychological research
on eyewitness testimony: A survey
of the experts. American Psychologist. |
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Smith,
Kassin, & Ellsworth (1989). Eyewitness
accuracy and confidence: Within
versus between subject correlations. Journal
of Applied Psychology. |
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Kassin
(1985). Eyewitness identification: Retrospective self-awareness
and the accuracy confidence correlation. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology. |
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Kassin
(1984). Eyewitness identification: Victims versus bystanders. Journal
of Applied Social Psychology. |
Stimulus
Materials |
|
Kassin, Tubb, Hosch, & Memon (2001). A
verbatim
copy of the 30 items
used in this
survey of
eyewitness
experts.
|
Links |
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To address problems with eyewitness
identifications, the U.S. Department
of Justice assembled a working group
of police, prosecutors, defense attorneys,
and research psychologists. In 1999,
the group authored a manual, Eyewitness
Evidence: A Guide for Law Enforcement. |
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To learn more about
the psychology of eyewitness
memory and behavior, visit
the following interactive web
sites.
PBS
Frontline's What Jennifer
Saw
Prof.
Gary Wells (Iowa State University)
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