A site that argues for the reality of repressed memories.
Mental Health Net's abuse resources.
A write-up of Loftus' "Lost in a Mall" study.
A couple of lawyers provide an overview of why they think some people have been falsely accused due to false memories.
Another report of a false?/recovered? memory.
An argument for the feasibility of recovered memories.
A discussion of repressed memories.
Jennifer Freyd's homepage.
Some follow-up information from the PBS/Frontline video "What Jennifer Saw."
The False Memory Syndrome Foundation home page.
APA's report on memories of childhood abuse.
Therapeutic Recovery of Repressed Memories. Lots of connections here.
A short overview/summary of children's eyewitness testimony.
A paper on a recall of features by ratings test that predicts accuracy of identication of suspects.
A set of connections to www sites related to children in the courtroom. This is a very good site.
An article by Memon & Stevenage that critically examines the cognitive interview technique.
A nice web site that examines the connection between hypnosis and various aspects of memory.
Abstract of Lampinen, J.M. & Smith, V.L. (1995). The Incredible (and Sometimes Incredulous) Child Witness: Child Eyewitnesses' Sensitivity to Source Credibility Cues. Journal of Applied Psychology, 80, 621-627.
An Elizabeth Loftus homepage. There is not a great deal here, but there are connections to some recent (genral interest) articles she has written.
A set of abstracts of presentations on the misinformation effect by J. Lampinen. Abstract 1 Abstract 2 Abstract 3
A short overview of research on adult eyewitness testimony.
A large set of connections to sites on a variety of topics related to facial analysis. This is a wide-ranging comprehensive list.
The face recognition home page. Another comprehensive listing of sites and products related to face recognition.
A list of publications, with links to the complete manuscipt, on using computerized systems for face retrieval. Articles by Lee & Whalen (and others).
A short summary of some research on eyewtiness testimony. Some of the work shows that the presence of, or changes in the wearing of, glasses greatly affects recognition performance.
Here is a report of one researchers work on the other-race effect and some additional face recognition material.
The September, 1996 issue of the Criminal Defense Newletter has a long discussion of the legal issues regarding eyewitness reliability. It is a nice overview of the area from a legal perspective.
A web site related to methods of using computers for face recognition.
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