The present study investigated whether child (six–eight years of age) and adult witnesses (18–29 years of age) would exhibit an own-age bias when trying to identify targets from video lineups. One hundred and eighty-six participants viewed two filmed events that were identical, except one starred a child target and one a young adult. After a delay of two–three days each witness saw a lineup for the child and adult target. Children exhibited an own-age bias and were better at correctly identifying the own-age target from a target-present (TP) lineup and made more correct rejections for the own-age target-absent (TA) lineup. Adults however, showed a reversed own-age bias for the TP lineups as they made more correct identifications for the chi...
The current paper reviews research that has investigated developmental differences in lineup identif...
Through centuries, witnesses to crimes have played an important role for the police to get a convict...
The present study explored own-age biases in deception detection, investigating whether individuals ...
A group of young-adult (aged 18–35 years) and older-adult witnesses (aged 61–83 years) viewed films ...
Previous research indicates that the age of the witness making an identification affects accuracy. F...
The identification performance of children (5 to 6 years, n = 180; 9- to 10- years, n = 180) and adu...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
Older adults (60- to 99-year-olds) and younger adults (18- to 49-year-olds) viewed a videotaped thef...
The main aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the decision processes and strategies u...
The own-age-bias is the finding that people are better able to recognize faces from their own age gr...
Children from 5 to 12 years of age (N = 779) were shown a videotape where a preschool teacher has mo...
A robust finding from the eyewitness literature is that children are as accurate as adults on target...
In the UK video parades are the preferred method of identification employed in criminal cases. This ...
Children recognize children's faces more accurately than adult faces, and adults recognize adult fac...
The aim of the present study was to assess the occurence of an own-age bias on age estimation perfor...
The current paper reviews research that has investigated developmental differences in lineup identif...
Through centuries, witnesses to crimes have played an important role for the police to get a convict...
The present study explored own-age biases in deception detection, investigating whether individuals ...
A group of young-adult (aged 18–35 years) and older-adult witnesses (aged 61–83 years) viewed films ...
Previous research indicates that the age of the witness making an identification affects accuracy. F...
The identification performance of children (5 to 6 years, n = 180; 9- to 10- years, n = 180) and adu...
We tested developmental trends in eyewitness identification in biased and unbiased lineups. Our main...
Older adults (60- to 99-year-olds) and younger adults (18- to 49-year-olds) viewed a videotaped thef...
The main aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the decision processes and strategies u...
The own-age-bias is the finding that people are better able to recognize faces from their own age gr...
Children from 5 to 12 years of age (N = 779) were shown a videotape where a preschool teacher has mo...
A robust finding from the eyewitness literature is that children are as accurate as adults on target...
In the UK video parades are the preferred method of identification employed in criminal cases. This ...
Children recognize children's faces more accurately than adult faces, and adults recognize adult fac...
The aim of the present study was to assess the occurence of an own-age bias on age estimation perfor...
The current paper reviews research that has investigated developmental differences in lineup identif...
Through centuries, witnesses to crimes have played an important role for the police to get a convict...
The present study explored own-age biases in deception detection, investigating whether individuals ...