BiblioAlertes du 7 mars 2006

7 mars 2006 par Frank Arnould

Benton, T.R., Ross, D.F., Bradshaw, E., Thomas, W.N., & bradshaw, G.S. (2006). Eyewitness memory is still not common sense : Comparing jurors, judges and law enforcement to eyewitness experts. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n°1, 115-129. (Lire le compte-rendu).

Merckelbach, H., Smeets, T., Geraerts, E., Jelicic, M., Bouwen, A., & Smeets, E. (2006). I haven’t thought about this for years ! Dating recent recalls of vivid memories. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n°1, 33-42.

Scullin, M.H., & Bonner, K. (2006). Theory of mind, inhibitory control, and preschool-age children’s suggestibility in different interviewing contexts. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, vol. 93, n°2, 120-128.

Weber, N., & Brewer, N. (2006). Positive versus negative face recognition decisions : Confidence, accuracy, and response latency. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n°1, 17-31. (Lire le compte-rendu).

Zajac, R., & Hayne, H. (2006). The negative effect of cross-examination style questioning on children’s accuracy : Older children are not immune. Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 20, n°1, 3-16.