When we see a stranger's face we quickly form impressions of his or her personality, and expectations of how the stranger might behave. Might these intuitive character judgements bias source monitoring? Participants read headlines oreportedo by a trustworthy- and an untrustworthy-looking reporter. Subsequently, participants recalled which reporter provided each headline. Source memory for likely-sounding headlines was most accurate when a trustworthy-looking reporter had provided the headlines. Conversely, source memory for unlikely-sounding headlines was most accurate when an untrustworthy-looking reporter had provided the headlines. This bias appeared to be driven by the use of decision criteria during retrieval rather than differences in...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
This research asked why people falsely remember stereotype-consistent information when cognitive res...
When we see a stranger's face we quickly form impressions of his or her personality, and expectation...
Decisions about whether to trust someone can be influenced by competing sources of information, such...
This research examined the use of stereotypic expectancies as source cues for biographical memories....
Five studies examined whether spontaneous trait inferences uniquely reference the person who perform...
Inferences of others’ social traits from their faces can influence how we think and behave towards ...
In forensic person recognition tasks, mistakes in the identification of unfamiliar faces occur frequ...
This paper reports further experiments with a patient (MR) who has a tendency to claim that unfamous...
This online study analyses how much detail people remember after a single viewing of a drink-spiking...
The impression of trustworthiness based on someone's facial appearance biases our subsequent behavio...
The rated typicality of faces has perhaps been found to be the most reliable predictor of how well o...
In two experiments, we investigated the role of perceptual information in spurious recognition judgm...
In two experiments, we investigated the relationships among stereotype strength, processing capacity...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
This research asked why people falsely remember stereotype-consistent information when cognitive res...
When we see a stranger's face we quickly form impressions of his or her personality, and expectation...
Decisions about whether to trust someone can be influenced by competing sources of information, such...
This research examined the use of stereotypic expectancies as source cues for biographical memories....
Five studies examined whether spontaneous trait inferences uniquely reference the person who perform...
Inferences of others’ social traits from their faces can influence how we think and behave towards ...
In forensic person recognition tasks, mistakes in the identification of unfamiliar faces occur frequ...
This paper reports further experiments with a patient (MR) who has a tendency to claim that unfamous...
This online study analyses how much detail people remember after a single viewing of a drink-spiking...
The impression of trustworthiness based on someone's facial appearance biases our subsequent behavio...
The rated typicality of faces has perhaps been found to be the most reliable predictor of how well o...
In two experiments, we investigated the role of perceptual information in spurious recognition judgm...
In two experiments, we investigated the relationships among stereotype strength, processing capacity...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
Verbal descriptions of faces can at times impair and at other times facilitate subsequent face ident...
This research asked why people falsely remember stereotype-consistent information when cognitive res...