Larry Heuer Steve Penrod Maria Hartwig
415K Milbank Hall Office: 2131N
212-854-7507 212-237-8877 212-237-8059
LBH3@Columbia.edu spenrod@jjay.cuny.edu mhartwig@jjay.cuny.edu
www.columbia.edu/~lbh3 http://penrods.net/
Office Hours: Th, 11:30 – 1:00 http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~spenrod/2007/
Barnard Classroom: LL104 Diana John Jay Classroom: 2303 North Hall
Directions to John Jay College: Our John Jay meetings will take place in Room 2303, in John Jay's North Hall on 59th Street between 9th and 10th Ave. The nearest subway stop is 59th St. (Columbus Circle) on the 1 Train. From there you will have to walk about 3 blocks. This link will take you to a local map: John Jay, North Hall .
Directions to Barnard College: Our Barnard meetings will take place in room LL104 Diana. Enter the Barnard gate at 117th and Broadway (on the west side of the steet). The nearest subway stop is 116th and Broadway on the 1 Train. The Diana is the new building on your right as you near the north end of Barnard's campus. This link will take you to a local map: Barnard College .
This seminar will survey the topic areas addressed by researchers interested in the interface between psychology and the law. Students will be expected to read the assigned articles closely, and come to class prepared to participate in a critical analysis of the research. We will evaluate this research from both a basic (e.g., What contributions has the research made to relevant theory in psychology, and what are the implications for future research?) and an applied (What contributions has the research made to our understanding of a psychological problem in a legal context, and what are the implications for social policy?) perspective.
Students will be expected to read the core articles prior to our weekly meetings, and to write a brief "reaction paper" about the readings (see note below about e-mailing reaction papers).
Learning Objectives:
Successful participation in this course should equip students with the following skills:
Class participation:
(1) Students should be familiar with all assigned readings each week, and come to class prepared to discuss their thoughts on the material; If you're not prepared, or if you haven't turned in your reaction paper on time, don't come to class.
(2) Each week, you will be required to turn in a "reaction paper". Each paper should include at least one or more thoughtful comments on each of the assigned articles for that week. Comments might include criticisms of the research, ideas for future research, or general thoughts on integrating the current week's reading with other assigned materials. These papers must be delivered to either Heuer (Barnard students) or Penrod/Hartwig (John Jay students) via e-mail no later than 11 p.m. on the day before class. The subject line of your email should say "Psych-Law reaction paper." Basically, these are notes of thoughts that occur to you as you read the materials, and that you might bring up in our class discussion. Failure to turn in the reaction paper by the designated hour will be treated as an absence from that week's class.
(3) Students will be allowed one absence during the semester. If you elect to miss a class period, you do not need to hand in that week's reaction paper. Each additional absence will be penalized by a reduction of 1 full letter in your final grade. Arriving for class more than 10 minutes late without prior permission will be counted as an absence. No excuses will be accepted.
Class participation is a very important part of the learning process in this course. You will be evaluated on the quality of your contributions and insights. A quality comment possesses one or more of the following properties:
Final paper.
A central goal of this course is to identify areas in which the current state of theorizing and research on the interface between psychology and law leaves important theoretical issues unresolved or applied questions unanswered. Our discussions will be geared toward identifying fruitful avenues for future research which address these limitations. Consistent with this approach, each student will be required to write an extensive (approximately 10 page) paper in which some area of the research relevant to this class is reviewed, a problem is identified, and a study is proposed which addresses this problem. This paper should be written in a format consistent with the guidelines set out in the Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (5th Edition, 2001)--it should begin with an abstract, followed by an introduction, method section, and references. The following URL’s are excellent guides to most of what you would need to know about APA style for your paper:
Every research proposal must include AT LEAST 3 citations to research published in 2007 or later.
By April 15, every Barnard and John Jay student must turn in a brief (1-2 page) final paper proposal. This proposal must include at least 3 citations to relevant research published in 2007 or later. Students are encouraged to use my office hours and class time to discuss the development of their ideas and the methods they will employ to test them. Proposals should be sent to me as an MSWord file attached to an email clearly identified as the final paper proposal for this class.
Everyone
in class is responsible for the weekly Required
Grading.
Grades will be based on the following criteria: 50% classroom participation (including weekly reaction papers), 50% final papers.
Class Schedule and Topics
Note: You will encounter papers which are password protected--the passwords for jury articles is: jury -- for eyewitness articles it is: eye -- in a few instances, try: rdp . In most other cases, the password is lbh3
28 January
Meeting Location: John Jay
Juries
Required
Read, J. D. & Desmarais, S. L.; (2009). Lay knowledge of eyewitness issues: A Canadian evaluation. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 23, 301-326. ‘eye’
Cutler, B. L., Penrod, S. D., & Stuve, T. E. (1988). Juror decisionmaking in eyewitness identification cases. Law and Human Behavior, 12, 41-55. ‘eye’
Martire, K. A. & Kemp, R. I. (2009). The impact of eyewitness expert evidence and judicial instruction on juror ability to evaluate eyewitness testimony. Law and Human Behavior, 33, 225-236. ‘jury’
McAuliff, B. D.; Kovera, M. B. (2007). Estimating the effects of misleading information on witness accuracy: Can experts tell jurors something they don't already know. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 21, 849-870. ‘jury’
Additional
Adams, C. M. S., & Bourgeois, M. J. (2006). Separating Compensatory and Punitive Damage Award Decisions by Trial Bifurcation . Law and Human Behavior, 30, 11-30.
Bright, D. A., & Goodman-Delahunty, J. (2006). Gruesome Evidence and Emotion: Anger, Blame, and Jury Decision-Making . Law and Human Behavior, 30, 183-202.
Devine, D. J., Clayton, L. D., Dunford, B. B., Seying, R., Pryce, J. (2001). Jury decision making: 45 years of empirical research on deliberating groups. Psychology, Public Policy, & Law, 7, 622-727.
Englich, B., Mussweiler, T., & Strack, F. (2005). The Last Word in Court--A Hidden Disadvantage for the Defense . Law and Human Behavior, 29, 705-722.
Horowitz, I. A., Kerr, N. L., Park, E. S., & Gockel, C. (2006). Chaos in The Courtroom Reconsidered: Emotional Bias and Juror Nullification. Law and Human Behavior, 30, 163-181.
Heuer, L.B. & Penrod, S. (1994). Juror notetaking and question asking during trials: A national field experiment. Law and Human Behavior, 18, 121-150.
Mitchell, T. L., Haw, R. M., Pfeifer, J. E., & Meissner, C. A. (2005). Racial Bias in Mock Juror Decision-Making: A Meta-Analytic Review of Defendant Treatment . Law and Human Behavior, 29, 621-637.
Read, J. D., Connolly, D. A., & Welsh, A. (2006). An Archival Analysis of Actual Cases of Historic Child Sexual Abuse: A Comparison of Jury and Bench Trials . Law and Human Behavior, 30, 259-285.
Sommers, S. R. (2006). On Racial Diversity and Group Decision Making: Identifying Multiple Effects of Racial Composition on Jury Deliberations . Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 90, 597-612.
Steblay, N., Hosch, H.M., Culhane, S. E. & McWethy, A. (2006). The Impact on Juror Verdicts of Judicial Instruction to Disregard Inadmissible Evidence: A Meta-Analysis. Law Human Behavior, 30 469–492.
4 February
Meeting Location: Barnard
Deception and Lie Detection
Required
Bond, C., & Uysal, A. (2007). On lie detection 'Wizards.'. Law and Human Behavior, 31(1), 109-115 .
Hartwig, M., Granhag, P.A., Strömwall, L.A., & Kronkvist, O. (2006). Strategic use of evidence during police interviews: When training to detect deception works. Law and Human Behavior, 30, 603-619 .
Additional
Akehurst, L., Bull, R., Vrij, A., & Kohnken, G. (2004). The Effects of Training Professional Groups and Lay Persons to use Criteria-Based Content Analysis to Detect Deception. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 18(7), 877-891.
Bond, C. F., DePaulo, B. M. (2006). Accuracy of Deception Judgments. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 10(3), 214-234.
Edelstein, R. S., Luten, T. L., Ekman, P., & Goodman, G. S. (2006). Detecting lies in children and adults. Law and Human Behavior, 30, 1-10.
Grubin, D., & Madsen, L. (2005). Lie detection and the polygraph: A historical review. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology. 16(2), 357-369.
Hartwig, M., Granhag, P. A., Stromwall, L. A., & Vrij, A. (2005). Detecting deception via strategic disclosure of evidence. Law and Human Behavior, 29(4), 469-484.
Mann, S., Vrij, A., & Bull, R. (2002). Suspects, lies and videotape: An analysis of authentic high-stakes liars. Law and Human Behavior, 26, 365–376. (this is also a fun article, but perhaps most interesting for revealing how little is still known about lie detection Study with 16 actual suspects shows that liars blink less and pause more – contrary to conventional wisdom)
Myers, B. Latter, R., & Addollahi-Arena, M. K. (2006). The court of public opinion: late perceptions of polygraph testing. Law and Human Behavior, 30 (509-523).
Vrij, A., Mann, S., & Fisher, R.P. (2006). An empirical test of the Behaviour Analysis Interview. Law and Human Behavior, 30(3), 329-345.
Vrij, A., Mann, S., Robbins, E., Robinson, M. (2006). Police Officers’ Ability to Detect Deception in High Stakes Situations and in Repeated Lie Detection Tests. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 20(6), 741-755.
11 February
Meeting Location: John Jay
Confessions and Interrogations
Required
Kassin, S. M. & Gudjonsson, G. H. (2004). The Psychology of Confessions: A Review of the Literature and Issues. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 5, 33-67.
The Movie Murder on a Sunday Morning is an Oscar winning documentary about the interrogation and trial of 15-year-old African-American Brenton Butler. It is an excellent example of some of the interrogation dynamics discussed in this research. It is available for viewing at the 3rd floor media desk of the Barnard Libarary in Lehman Hall. John Jay students from this course must present the John Jay ID to the desk attendant when entering Lehman Hall.
Additional
Horselenberg, R., Merckelbach, H., Smeets, T., Franssens, D., Peters, G. Y., & Zeles, G. (2006). False confessions in the lab: Do plausibility and consequences matter? Psychology, Crime & Law, 12(1), 61-75.
Kassin,
S. M. (2006). A critical appraisal of
modern police interrogations. In T. Williamson (Ed.), Investigative interviewing: Rights, research,
regulation. (pp. 207-228).
Kassin, S. M., & Kiechel, K. L. (1996). The social psychology of false confessions: Compliance, internalization, and confabulation. Psychological Science, 7(3), 125-128.
Lassiter, G. D., Geers, A. L., Handley,
Meissner, C. A., & Kassin, S. M. (2004).
“You’re guilty, so just confess!” Cognitive and behavioral confirmation biases
in the interrogation room. In D. Lassiter
(Ed.), Interrogations, confessions, and
entrapment.
Owen-Kostelnik, J., Reppucci, N. D., & Meyer, J. R. (2006). Testimony and interrogation of minors: Assumptions about maturity and morality. American Psychologist, 61(4), 286-304.
Ratcliff, J. J., Lassiter, G. D., Schmidt, H. C., & Snyder, C, J. (2006). Camera Perspective Bias in Videotaped Confessions: Experimental Evidence of Its Perceptual Basis. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 12(4), 197-206.
Russano, M. B., Meissner, C. A., Narchet, F. M., & Kassin, S. M. (2005). Investigating True and False Confessions Within a Novel Experimental Paradigm. Psychological Science, 16(6), 481-486.
25 February
Meeting Location: Barnard
Eyewitnesses
Required
Additional
Behrman, B. W., & Davey., S. L. (2001.) Eyewitness Identification in Actual Criminal Cases: An Archival Analysis, Law and Human Behavior, 25, 475-491.
Behrman, B. W., & Richards., R. E. (2005). Suspect/Foil Identification in Actual Crimes and in the Laboratory: A Reality Monitoring Analysis. Law and Human Behavior , 29, 279-301.
Cutler, B. L., Dexter, H. R., & Penrod, S. D. (1989). Expert testimony and jury decision making: An empirical analysis. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 7, 215-225
Deffenbacher, K. A., Bornstein, B. H., Penrod, S. D., & McGorty, E. K. (2004). A Meta-Analytic Review of the Effects of High Stress on Eyewitness Memory. Law & Human Behavior, 28(6), 687-706.
Haw, R. M. & Fisher, R. P. (2004). Effects of Administrator-Witness Contact on Eyewitness Identification Accuracy. Journal of Applied Psychology, 89, 1106-1112.
Kassin, S. M. (1998). Eyewitness identification procedures: The fifth rule. Law & Human Behavior, 22, 649-653.
Kassin, S. M., Tubb, V. A., Hosch, H. M., & Memon, A. (2001). On the "general acceptance" of eyewitness testimony research. American Psychologist, 56, 405-416.
Krauss, D. A., & Lee, D. H. (2003). Deliberating on dangerousness and death: Jurors' ability to differentiate between expert actuarial and clinical predictions of dangerousness. International Journal of Law & Psychiatry, 26(2), 113-137.
Meissner, C. A., & Brigham, J. C. (2001). Thirty years of investigating the own-race bias in memory for faces: A meta-analytic review. Psychology, Public Policy, & Law, 7, 3-35.
Penrod, S., & Cutler, B. (1995) Witness confidence and witness accuracy: Assessing their forensic relation. Psychology, Public Policy, & Law, 1(4), 817-845.
Phillips, M. R., McAuliff, B. D., Kovera, M. B., & Cutler, B. L. (1999). Double-blind photoarray administration as a safeguard against investigator bias. Journal of Applied Psychology, 84, 940-95.
Steblay, N., Dysart, J., Fulero, S., & Lindsay, R. C. L. (2001). Eyewitness Accuracy Rates in Sequential and Simultaneous Lineup Presentations: A Meta-Analytic Comparison, Law and Human Behavior, 25, 459-473.
Steblay, N., Dysart, J., Fulero, S., & Lindsay, R. C. L. (2003). Eyewitness accuracy rates in police showup and lineup presentations: A meta-analytic comparison. Law & Human Behavior, 27(5), 523-540.
Wells, G.L., Small. M., Penrod, S., Malpass, R. S., Fulero, S. M., & Brimacombe, C. A. E. (1998). Eyewitness identification procedures: Recommendations for lineups and photospreads. Law and Human Behavior, 22, 603-647.
Valentine T. & Pamela Heaton (1999). An Evaluation of the Fairness of Police Line-Ups and Video Identifications, Applied Cognitive Psychology 13, S59-S72.
Weber, N., & Brewer, N. (2003). The effect of judgment type and confidence scale on confidence-accuracy calibration in face recognition. Journal of Applied Psychology, 88(3), 490-499.
Yarmey, A. D. (2004). Eyewitness recall and photo identification: a field experiment. Psychology, Crime & Law, 10(1), 53-68.
4 March
Meeting Location: John Jay
Capital Punishment and Death Qualification
Required
Cowan, C.L. & Thompson, W. & Ellsworth, P. (1984). The effects of death qualification on jurors' predisposition to convict and on the quality of deliberation. Law and Human Behavior, 8, 53-80.
Bersoff, D.N. (1987). Social science data and the Supreme Court. Psychology and Law, 42(1), 52-58.
Lockhart vs.McCree APA Amicus Brief. (1987). American Psychologist, 42, 59-68.
Elliott, R. (1991). Social science data and the APA: The Lockhart brief as a case in point. Law and Human Behavior, 15, 59-76.
Ellsworth, P. (1991). To tell what we know or wait for Godot? Law and Human Behavior, 15, 77-90.
O'Neil, K. M., Patry, M. W., & Penrod, S. D. (2004). Exploring the Effects of Attitudes Toward the Death Penalty on Capital Sentencing Verdicts. Psychology, Public Policy, & Law, 10(4), 443-470.
Additional
Ackerson, K. S., Brodsky, S. L., & Zapf, P. A. (2005). Judges' and Psychologists' Assessments of Legal and Clinical Factors in Competence for Execution . Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 11, 164-193.
Allen, M., Mabry, E., & McKelton, D.-M. (1998). Impact of juror attitudes about the death penalty on juror evaluations of guilt and punishment: A meta-analysis. Law & Human Behavior, 22(6), 715-731.
Antonio, M. E. (2006). Arbitrariness and the Death Penalty: How the Defendant's Appearance During Trial Influences Capital Jurors' Punishment Decision . Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 24, 215-234.
Arndt, J., Lieberman, J. D., Cook, A., & Solomon, S. (2005). Terror Management in the Courtroom: Exploring the Effects of Mortality Salience on Legal Decision Making . Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 11, 407-438.
Boots, D. P., Heide, K. M., & Cochran, J. K. (2004). Death Penalty Support for Special Offender Populations of Legally Convicted Murderers: Juveniles, the Mentally Retarded, and the Mentally Incompetent. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 22, 223-238.
Butler, B. M., & Moran, G. (2002). The role of death qualification in venirepersons' evaluations of aggravating and mitigating circumstances in capital trials. Law & Human Behavior, 26(2), 175-184.
Dorland, M., & Krauss, D. (2005). The Danger Of Dangerousness In Capital Sentencing: Exacerbating The Problem of Arbitrary And Capricious Decision-Making . Law & Psychology Review, 29, 63-105.
Gross, S. R. (1984). Determining the neutrality of death-qualified juries. Law and Human Behavior, 8, 7-30.
Haney, C. (2005). Death by design: Capitol punishment as a
social psychological system .
Krauss, D. A., Lieberman, J. D., & Olson, J. (2004). The Effects of Rational and Experiential Information Processing of Expert Testimony in Death Penalty Cases . Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 22, 801-822.
Wiener, R. L., Rogers, M., Winter, R., Hurt, L., Hackney, A., Kadela, K., Seib, H., Rauch, S., Warren, L., & Morasco, B. (2004). Guided Jury Discretion in Capital Murder Cases: The Role of Declarative and Procedural Knowledge . Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 10, 516-576.
Unnever, J. D., Cullen, F. T., &
Roberts, J. V. (2005). Note
everyone strongly supports the death penalty: Assessing weakly-held attitudes
about capital punishment . American Journal of Criminal Justice, 29,
187-216.
11 March
Meeting Location: Barnard
Emotion and the Law (lbh3)
Required
Additional
Law & Human Behavior, Special Issue on Emotion in Legal Judgment and Decision Making:
Bornstein, B. H., & Wiener, R. L. (2006). Introduction to the Special Issue on Emotion in Legal Judgment and Decision Making. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 115-118.
Bright, D. A., & Goodman-Delahunty, J. (2006). Gruesome Evidence and Emotion: Anger, Blame, and Jury Decision-Making. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 183-202
Feigenson, N., & Park, J. (2006). Emotions and Attributions of Legal Responsibility and Blame: A Research Review. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 143-161.
Horowitz, I. A., Kerr, N. L., Park, E. S., & Gockel, C. (2006). Chaos in The Courtroom Reconsidered: Emotional Bias and Juror Nullification. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 163-181.
Maroney, T. A. (2006). Law and Emotion: A Proposed Taxonomy of an Emerging Field. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 119-142.
Rose, M. R., Nadler, J., & Clark, J. (2006). Appropriately Upset? Emotion Norms and Perceptions of Crime Victims. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 203-219.
Wessel, E., Drevland, G. C., Eilertsen, D. E., & Magnussen, S. (2006). Credibility of the Emotional Witness: A Study of Ratings by Court Judges. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 221-230.
Wiener, R. L., Bernstein, B. H., & Voss, A. (2006). Emotion and the Law: A Framework for Inquiry. Law and Human Behavior, 30(2), 231-248.
Other readings on emotion and the law:
Bandes, S. A. (1999). The passions of law. New York, NY: New York University Press.
Bartels, D. M., Bauman, C. W., Skitka, L. J., & Medin, D. L. (2009). Moral judgment and decision making.
Barton, T. D. (1999). Therapeutic jurisprudence, preventive law, and creative problem solving: An essay on harnessing emotion and human connection. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 5(4), 921-943.
Blumenthal, J. A. (2005). Does mood influence moral judgment? An empirical test with legal and policy implications. Law and Psychology Review, 29, 1.
Feigenson, N. R. (2003). Emotions, risk perceptions and blaming in 9/11 cases. Brooklyn Law Review, 68, 959, 962–978.
Feigenson, N., et al. (2001). The role of emotions in comparative negligence judgments. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 31, 576.
Finkel, N. J., & Parrott, W. G. (2006). Emotions and culpability: How the law is at odds with psychology, jurors, and itself. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Ho, R., ForsterLee, L., ForsterLee, R., & Crofts, N. (2002). Justice versus vengeance: Motives underlying punitive judgements. Personality and Individual Differences, 33(3), 365-378.
Pillsbury, S. H. (1999). Harlan, Holmes, and the passions of justice. In S. A. Bandes (Ed.), The passions of law (pp. 330-362). New York, NY: New York University Press.
Prinz, J. J. (2007). The emotional construction of morals. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; US.
25 March
Meeting Location: John Jay
Procedural Fairness
Required
This URL will link you to the YouTube video titled "Monkey cooperation and fairness" I referred to in our last class:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAFQ5kUHPkY
Additional
Kitzmann, K. M., and Emery, R. E. (1993). Procedural justice and parents' satisfaction in a field study of child custrody dispute resolution. Law & Human Behavior, 17, 553-567.
MacCoun, R. J. & Tyler, T. R. (1988) The basis of citizens' perceptions of the criminal jury: Procedural fairness, accuracy, and efficiency. Law and Human Behavior, 12, 333-352.
Murphy, K. (2004). The role of trust and nurturing compliance: A study of accused tax of lawyers. Law and Human Behavior, 28(2), 187-209.
Tyler, T. R. (1984). The role of perceived injustice in defendant's evaluations of their courtroom experience. Law and Society Review, 18, 51-74.
Tyler, T. R. (1990). Why citizens obey the law: Procedural justice, legitimacy,
and compliance.
Wenzel, M. (2004). The social side of sanctions: Personal and social norms as moderators of deterrence. Law and Human Behavior, 28(5), 547-567.
8 April
Meeting Location: Barnard
Free Will and the Law
2007 Law, Responsibility, and the Brain. PLoS Biol, 5(4), 693-700.
Gomes, G. (2007). Free will, the self, and the brain. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 25(2), 221-234.
Jones, M. (2003). Overcoming the Myth of Free Will in Criminal Law: The True Impact of the Genetic Revolution. Duke Law Journal, 52.
15 April
Meeting Location: John Jay
Clinical Psychology and the Law
Required
Morris, N. (1982). The brothel boy: A fragment of a manuscript.
Morse, S. J. (1998). Fear of danger, flight from culpability. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 4(2), 250-267.
Perlin, M. L. (1996). "Dignity was the first to leave": Godinez v. Moran, Colin Ferguson, and teh trial of mentally disabled criminal defendants. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 14, 61-81.
22 April
Meeting Location: Barnard
Media Effects
Required
Additional
Penrod 2006 NSF Pretrial Publicity Research Grant Proposal
Lisa Marie Chrzanowski. (2005). Rape? Truth? And The Media. Laboratory And Field Assessments Of Pretrial Publicity In A Real Case. CUNY Dissertation.
Hope, L., Memon, A., & McGeorge, P. (2004).
Understanding Pretrial Publicity: Predecisional Distortion of Evidence by Mock Jurors . Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 10, 111-119.
Shaw, J. I., & Skolnick, P. (2004). Effects of Prejudicial Pretrial Publicity From Physical and Witness Evidence on Mock Jurors' Decision Making . Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 34, 2132-2148.
Kovera, M. B. (2002). The effects of general pretrial publicity on juror decisions: An examination of moderators and mediating mechanisms . Law and Human Behavior, 26, 43-72.
Vidmar, N. (2002). Case studies of pre- and midtrial prejudice in criminal and civil litigation . Law and Human Behavior, 26, 73-105.
Carnagey, N. L., & Anderson, C. A. (2005). The Effects
of Reward and Punishment in Violent Video Games on Aggressive Affect, Cognition,
and Behavior . Psychological Science, 16, 882-889.
Anderson, C. A. (2004). An update on the effects of playing
violent video games . Journal of Adolescence, 27, 113-122.
Carnagey,
N. L., & Anderson, C. A. (2004).
Violent video game exposure and aggression: A literature review . Minerva Psichiatrica, 45, 1-18.
Anderson, C. A., & Murphy, C. R. (2003). Violent Video Games and Aggressive Behavior in Young Women . Aggressive Behavior, 29, 423-429.
29 April
Meeting Location: John Jay
Eyewitnesses: Sequential Lineups and the Illinois "Experiment"
Required
Gronlund, S.
D., Carlson, C. A., Dailey, S. B. & Goodsell, C. A. (2009). Robustness of
the Sequential Lineup Advantage. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied,
15, 140-152.
Steblay,
N., & Dysart, J., (2009). Seventy Tests of the Sequential Superiority
Effect: A Meta-Analysis. Unpublished
manuscript.