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Original Articles

The effects of hypnosis, context reinstatement, and anxiety on eyewitness memory

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Pages 55-68 | Published online: 31 Jan 2008

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Read on this site (5)

Kyriaki Giannou, Jason R. Taylor & Karen Lander. (2020) Exploring the relationship between mindfulness, compassion and unfamiliar face identification. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 32:3, pages 298-322.
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Michelle N. Dasse, Gary R. Elkins & Charles A. Weaver$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (2015) Hypnotizability, Not Suggestion, Influences False Memory Development. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 63:1, pages 110-128.
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Graham F. Wagstaff, Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft, Andrea M. Caddick, Lara J. Kirby & Elizabeth Lamont. (2011) Enhancing Witness Memory With Techniques Derived From Hypnotic Investigative Interviewing: Focused Meditation, Eye-Closure, and Context Reinstatement . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 59:2, pages 146-164.
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GrahamF. Wagstaff, Jo MaCveigh, Richard Boston, Lisa Scott, Jo Brunas-Wagstaff & Jon Cole. (2003) Can Laboratory Findings on Eyewitness Testimony Be Generalized to the Real World? An Archival Analysis of the Influence of Violence, Weapon Presence, and Age on Eyewitness Accuracy. The Journal of Psychology 137:1, pages 17-28.
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James B. Worthen & Virginia V. Wood. (2001) Memory discrimination for self-performed and imagined acts: Bizarreness effects in false recognition. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 54:1, pages 49-67.
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Articles from other publishers (12)

Kyriaki Giannou, Karen Lander & Jason R. Taylor. (2022) Attentional Features of Mindfulness are Better Predictors of Face Recognition than Empathy and Compassion-Based Constructs. Psychological Reports 126:3, pages 1481-1515.
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Kristina Kania & Elisa Krackow. (2014) The Impact of State and Trait Anxiety on Performance in an Eyewitness Source Monitoring Task. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 33:3, pages 311-327.
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Nicola A. Brace, Graham E. Pike, Richard I. Kemp & Jim Turner. (2009) Eye-Witness Identification Procedures and Stress: A Comparison of Live and Video Identification Parades. International Journal of Police Science & Management 11:2, pages 183-192.
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Graham F. Wagstaff. (2009) Is there a future for investigative hypnosis?. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 6:1, pages 43-57.
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Graham F. Wagstaff. (2008) Hypnosis and the Law. Criminal Justice and Behavior 35:10, pages 1277-1294.
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Graham F. Wagstaff, Jon Cole, Jacqueline Wheatcroft, Amanda Anderton & Hannah Madden. (2008) Reducing and reversing pseudomemories with hypnosis. Contemporary Hypnosis 25:3-4, pages 178-191.
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G.F. Wagstaff, J. Cole, J. Wheatcroft, M. Marshall & I. Barsby. (2007) A componential approach to hypnotic memory facilitation: focused meditation, context reinstatement and eye movements. Contemporary Hypnosis 24:3, pages 97-108.
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Kerri L. Pickel, Stephen J. Ross & Ronald S. Truelove. (2006) Do weapons automatically capture attention?. Applied Cognitive Psychology 20:7, pages 871-893.
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Laura Hammond, Graham F. Wagstaff & Jon Cole. (2006) Facilitating eyewitness memory in adults and children with context reinstatement and focused meditation. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 3:2, pages 117-130.
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Elisa Krackow, Steven Jay Lynn & David G. Payne. (2016) The Death of Princess Diana: The Effects of Memory Enhancement Procedures on Flashbulb Memories. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 25:3, pages 197-219.
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Graham Wagstaff, Joana Brunas‐Wagstaff, Jon Cole & Jacqueline Wheatcroft. (2006) New directions in forensic hypnosis: facilitating memory with a focused meditation technique. Contemporary Hypnosis 21:1, pages 14-27.
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Jeffrey M. Brown. (2002) Eyewitness memory for arousing events: putting things into context. Applied Cognitive Psychology 17:1, pages 93-106.
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