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Journal ArticleDOI

What U.S. law enforcement officers know and believe about eyewitness factors, eyewitness interviews and identification procedures

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TLDR
The authors surveyed 532 U.S. law enforcement officers about their knowledge of the National Institute of Justice's Guide and Training Manual and found that only 18% of reform officers and 1% of non-reform officers had both read the Guide and received training based on it.
Abstract
We surveyed 532 U.S. law enforcement officers about eyewitness factors, and how they conduct eyewitness interviews and identification procedures. There were 83 officers from departments that had implemented eyewitness reforms, and 449 officers from departments that had not implemented reforms. Officers from both samples had limited knowledge of eyewitness factors. They also reported conducting interviews and identification procedures in a manner that violated many provisions of the National Institute of Justice's Guide and Training Manual. Although officers in reform departments reported following more correct lineup procedures than officers in non-reform departments, the two groups did not differ in knowledge of eyewitness factors or in their use of proper interviewing procedures. Only 18% of the reform officers and 1% of the non-reform officers had both read the Guide and received training based on it. We discuss the implications of the present study for training U.S. law enforcement officers about eyewitness testimony. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Language: en

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Relationship Between Eyewitness Confidence and Identification Accuracy: A New Synthesis.

TL;DR: Understanding the information value of eyewitness confidence under pristine testing conditions can help the criminal justice system to simultaneously achieve both of its main objectives: to exonerate the innocent and to convict the guilty.
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Are the “Memory Wars” Over? A Scientist-Practitioner Gap in Beliefs About Repressed Memory

TL;DR: This article found high rates of belief in repressed memory among undergraduates and greater critical-thinking ability was associated with more skepticism about repressed memories, while groups that contained research-oriented psychologists and memory experts expressed more skepticism than other groups relative to other groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Policy and procedure recommendations for the collection and preservation of eyewitness identification evidence.

TL;DR: The reliability and integrity of eyewitness identification evidence is highly dependent on the procedures used by law enforcement for collecting and preserving the eyewitness evidence, and these nine recommendations can advance the reliability and Integrity of the evidence.
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The Return of the Repressed: The Persistent and Problematic Claims of Long-Forgotten Trauma:

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the belief in repressed memories occurs on a nontrivial scale and appears to have increased among clinical psychologists since the 1990s, and that the scientifically controversial concept of dissociative amnesia, which is argued is a substitute term for memory repression, has gained in popularity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eyewitness identification: Bayesian information gain, base-rate effect equivalency curves, and reasonable suspicion.

TL;DR: A novel Bayesian treatment of the eyewitness identification problem as it relates to various system variables, such as instruction effects, lineup presentation format, lineup-filler similarity, lineup administrator influence, and show-ups versus lineups is provided.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Eyewitness Identification Procedures: Recommendations for Lineups and Photospreads

TL;DR: In this paper, three important themes from the scientific literature relevant to lineup methods were identified and reviewed, namely relative-judgment processes, the lineups-as-experiments analogy, and confidence malleability.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the permanence of stored information in the human brain.

TL;DR: The evidence in no way confirms the view that all memories are permanent and thus poten- tially recoverable, and some failures that resulted from attempts to elicit retrieval of pre- viously stored information are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-analysis of facial identification studies.

TL;DR: Meta-analyse de 128 etudes consacrees a l'identification du temoignage oculaire et a la reconnaissance des visages, recherchant les facteurs influencant la performance and les secteurs de recherche a approfondir dans ce domaine.
Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analytic review of the effects of high stress on eyewitness memory.

TL;DR: There was considerable support for the hypothesis that high levels of stress negatively impact both types of eyewitness memory.
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