Articles with "eyewitness memory" as a keyword



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Eyewitness Memory Distortion Following Co-Witness Discussion: A Replication of Garry, French, Kinzett, and Mori (2008) in Ten Countries

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Published in 2019 at "Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition"

DOI: 10.1016/j.jarmac.2018.09.004

Abstract: We examined the replicability of the co-witness suggestibility effect originally reported by Garry et al. (2008) by testing participants from 10 countries (Brazil, Canada, Colombia, India, Japan, Malaysia, Poland, Portugal, Turkey, and the United Kingdom;… read more here.

Keywords: eyewitness memory; distortion following; witness suggestibility; memory ... See more keywords
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The effects of acute stress on eyewitness memory: an integrative review for eyewitness researchers

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Published in 2021 at "Memory"

DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2021.1955935

Abstract: ABSTRACT The eyewitness and fundamental memory research fields have investigated the effects of acute stress at encoding on memory performance for decades yet results often demonstrate contrasting conclusions. In this review, we first summarise findings… read more here.

Keywords: memory; acute stress; effects acute; memory performance ... See more keywords
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Eyewitness memory is reliable, but the criminal justice system is not

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Published in 2022 at "Memory"

DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2021.1974485

Abstract: ABSTRACT The reliability of any type of forensic evidence (e.g., forensic DNA) is assessed by testing its information value when it is not contaminated and is properly tested. Assessing the reliability of forensic memory evidence… read more here.

Keywords: criminal justice; justice system; eyewitness memory; memory reliable ... See more keywords
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In the DNA Exoneration Cases, Eyewitness Memory Was Not the Problem: A Reply to Berkowitz and Frenda (2018) and Wade, Nash, and Lindsay (2018)

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Published in 2018 at "Perspectives on Psychological Science"

DOI: 10.1177/1745691618769859

Abstract: The available real-world evidence suggests that, on an initial test, eyewitness memory is often reliable. Ironically, even the DNA exoneration cases—which generally involved nonpristine testing conditions and which are usually construed as an indictment of… read more here.

Keywords: dna exoneration; exoneration cases; eyewitness memory; cases eyewitness ... See more keywords