Title: Adult Eyewitness Testimony: Current Trends and Developments
Abstract: List of contributors Preface Part I. Cognitive, Physical and Social Processes and Factors Influencing Eyewitness Recall and Identification: 1. Reports of suggested memories: do people truly believe them? Kenneth R. Weingardt, H. Kelly Toland and Elizabeth F. Loftus 2. Memory source monitoring and eyewitness testimony D. Stephen Lindsay 3. Understanding bystander misidentifications: the role of familiarity and contextual knowledge J. Don Read 4. Unconscious transference and lineup identification: toward a memory blending approach David F. Ross, Stephen J. Ceci, David Dunning and Michael P. Toglia 5. Earwitness evidence: memory for a perpetrator's voice A. Daniel Yarmey 6. Whole body information: its relevance to eyewitnesses Malcolm D. MacLeod, Jason N. Frowley and John W. Shepherd 7. Actual victims and witnesses to robbery and fraud: an archival analysis Patricia A. Tollestrup, John W. Turtle and John C. Yuille Part II. Lineup Construction and Collection of Testimony: 8. Conceptual, practical and empirical issues associated with eyewitness identification test media Brian L. Cutler, Garrett L. Berman, Steven Penrod and Ronald P. Fisher 9. Biased lineups: where do they come from? R. C. L. Lindsay 10. Evaluating the fairness of lineups John C. Brigham and Jeffrey E. Pfeifer 11. Recommendations for properly conducted lineup identification tasks Gary L. Wells, Eric P. Seelau, Sheila M. Rydell and C. A. Elizabeth Luus 12. Improving eyewitness testimony with the Cognitive Interview Ronald P. Fisher, Michelle R. McCauley and R. Edward Geiselman Part III. Whom to Believe? Distinguishing Accurate from Inaccurate Eyewitnesses: 13. Distinguishing accurate from inaccurate eyewitness identifications: a reality monitoring approach Lisa Beth Stern and David Dunning 14. Decision times and eyewitness identification accuracy in simultaneous and sequential lineups Siegfried Ludwig Sporer 15. Individual differences in personality and eyewitness identification Harmon Hosch 16. Eyewitness identification confidence C. A. Elizabeth Luus and Gary L. Wells 17. Expectations of eyewitness performance: jurors' verdicts do not follow from their beliefs R. C. L. Lindsay 18. The appraisal of eyewitness testimony Michael R. Leippe Name index Subject index.
Publication Year: 2007
Publication Date: 2007-02-01
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 207
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