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Articles

Cautioning jurors regarding co-witness discussion: the impact of judicial warnings

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Pages 287-304 | Received 05 Jan 2011, Accepted 10 Oct 2011, Published online: 21 Feb 2012

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Read on this site (3)

Sarah L. Deck & Helen M. Paterson. (2022) Eyewitnesses who engage in immediate recall are not perceived as more credible. Psychology, Crime & Law 28:10, pages 967-979.
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Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft & Hannah Keogan. (2017) Impact of Evidence Type and Judicial Warning on Juror Perceptions of Global and Specific Witness Evidence. The Journal of Psychology 151:3, pages 247-267.
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Eric E. Jones, Phillip G. Palmer$suffix/text()$suffix/text() & Abby D. Bandy. (2015) The Effect of Inconsistency on Evaluations of a Second Eyewitness: It Depends On Who Testifies First. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 22:6, pages 814-829.
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Articles from other publishers (2)

Hayley J. Cullen, Helen M. Paterson & Celine van Golde. (2020) Mock Juror Perceptions of Witness Inattentional Blindness. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 38:2, pages 263-280.
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W. Burt Thompson, Nicole Dunkelberger, Salvatore Vescio & Claire Elling. (2016) Does a Judicial Warning Improve Defendant-Culprit Matching?. Applied Cognitive Psychology 30:5, pages 757-767.
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