Interview and interrogation
Developing Policy Relevant Information on Deterrence Aggressive Policing and Crime
Juror, Judge, and Counsel Perceptions of Voir Dire
Understanding rapport-building in investigative interviews: Does rapport's effect on witness memory and suggestibility depend on the interviewer?
Examining the positive effects of rapport building: When and why does rapport building benefit adult eyewitness memory?
Effects of Visual Imagery Ability of Hypermnesia for Pictures and Words
Effects of Cognitive Interviewing, Practice, and Interview Style on Children's Recall Performance
Police Videotaping of Suspect Interrogations and Confessions: A Preliminary Examination of Issues and Practices
Using Dolls to Interview Child Victims: Concerns and Interview Procedures
Evaluation and Field Implementation of the Cognitive Interview
Schoolhouse interrogations and confessions: Perspectives from principals and students
Offender Interviews: Implications for Intelligence-Led Policing
A Mixed-Method Examination of the Effectiveness of Money Bail and other Pretrial Release Options
Building More Reliable Forensic Sciences, Part 2
The scientific basis of several aspects of forensic evidence was first called into question by the 2009 National Research Council report. That report had an immediate impact on law enforcement, crime labs, courtrooms, and the broader scientific community.
Building More Reliable Forensic Sciences, Part 1
Arrogant Chameleons: Exposing Fraud-Detection Homicides
Questioning the Scientific Validity of the Parental Alienation Label in Abuse Cases (From Challenging Parental Alienation: New Directions for Professionals and Parents)
Questioning the prevalence and reliability of mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy from massively parallel sequencing data
Evaluation and Field Implementation of the Cognitive Interview, Executive Summary
Booker and Beyond Analyzing Sentencing Reform and Exploring New Research Directions
This webinar features a discussion of previously published research on the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2005 Booker decision - which effectively transformed the United States Sentencing Guidelines from a mandatory, to an advisory, system. The presentation will address selected research findings from the last 15 years. Individual participants will briefly review their previous research findings with particular attention paid to the analytic methods used.
See the YouTube Terms of Service and Google Privacy Policy