We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main interest was adolescent's lineup performance compared with children and adults. 7-10-year-olds, 11-13-year-olds, 14-16-year-olds, and adults (N = 431) watched a wallet-theft-video and subsequently identified the thief, victim, and witness from simultaneous target-present and target-absent six-person photo lineups. The thief-absent lineup included a bystander previously seen in thief proximity. Research on unconscious transference suggested a selection bias toward the bystander in adults and 11-13-year-olds, but not in younger children. Confirming our hypothesis, adolescents were more prone to bystander bias than all other age groups. This ma...
Laboratory-based mock crime studies have often been interpreted to mean that (i) eyewitness confiden...
Performance at identification lineup was assessed in 85 6- to 11-year-old typically developing child...
A common perception in the legal psychological field is that young children are poorer witnesses tha...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
The current paper reviews research that has investigated developmental differences in lineup identif...
Children from 5 to 12 years of age (N = 779) were shown a videotape where a preschool teacher has mo...
The identification performance of children (5 to 6 years, n = 180; 9- to 10- years, n = 180) and adu...
In the basic face memory literature, support has been found for the late maturation hypothesis, whic...
Middle-aged and older adults are frequently victims and witnesses of crime, but knowledge of how ide...
It is well established that children (as young as 5 years) can correctly identify a target from a ta...
The main aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the decision processes and strategies u...
This study examined whether or not exposing an eyewitness to a co-witness statement that incorrectly...
The purpose of this study was to assess young children's lineup identification performance compared ...
Eyewitnesses are an essential component of effective police investigations. The evidence that eyewit...
Laboratory-based mock crime studies have often been interpreted to mean that (i) eyewitness confiden...
Performance at identification lineup was assessed in 85 6- to 11-year-old typically developing child...
A common perception in the legal psychological field is that young children are poorer witnesses tha...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
The current paper reviews research that has investigated developmental differences in lineup identif...
Children from 5 to 12 years of age (N = 779) were shown a videotape where a preschool teacher has mo...
The identification performance of children (5 to 6 years, n = 180; 9- to 10- years, n = 180) and adu...
In the basic face memory literature, support has been found for the late maturation hypothesis, whic...
Middle-aged and older adults are frequently victims and witnesses of crime, but knowledge of how ide...
It is well established that children (as young as 5 years) can correctly identify a target from a ta...
The main aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the decision processes and strategies u...
This study examined whether or not exposing an eyewitness to a co-witness statement that incorrectly...
The purpose of this study was to assess young children's lineup identification performance compared ...
Eyewitnesses are an essential component of effective police investigations. The evidence that eyewit...
Laboratory-based mock crime studies have often been interpreted to mean that (i) eyewitness confiden...
Performance at identification lineup was assessed in 85 6- to 11-year-old typically developing child...
A common perception in the legal psychological field is that young children are poorer witnesses tha...