Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"Faye Collette Skelton"'
Autor:
Charlie D. Frowd, Faye Collette Skelton, Simon Chu, Cristina Fodarella, Palwinder Athwal-Kooner, Helen S. Jones, John E. Marsh, Ellena Wood, Elizabeth Jackson
Memory is facilitated by reflecting upon, or revisiting, the environment in which information was encoded. We investigated these “context reinstatement” (CR) techniques to improve the effectiveness of facial composites – visual likenesses of a
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::4787bd00a7ecd158eee7632bf2793fc9
Autor:
John E. Marsh, Linden J. Ball, Katherine Labonté, Cristina Fodarella, Emma Threadgold, Kirsty L. Battersby, Rachel Thorley, Faye Collette Skelton, Krupali Patel, Charlie D. Frowd, François Vachon
Publikováno v:
Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology / Revue canadienne de psychologie expérimentale. 71:183-190
Cell-phone conversation is ubiquitous within public spaces. The current study investigates whether ignored cell-phone conversation impairs eyewitness memory for a perpetrator. Participants viewed a video of a staged crime in the presence of 1 side of
Autor:
Cristina Fodarella, Kate Herold, Charlie D. Frowd, Heidi Kuivaniemi-Smith, Faye Collette Skelton, Charity Brown, Emma Portch, Peter J. B. Hancock
Publikováno v:
Ergonomics. 62(4)
Witnesses may construct a composite face of a perpetrator using a computerised interface. Police practitioners guide witnesses through this unusual process, the goal being to produce an identifiable image. However, any changes a perpetrator makes to
Autor:
Jack Demaine, Jan Philipp Röer, Axel Buchner, Charlie D. Frowd, John E. Marsh, Faye Collette Skelton, Raoul Bell
Publikováno v:
Journal of Forensic Practice. 17:271-280
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the potential susceptibility of eyewitness memory to the presence of extraneous background speech that comprises a description consistent with, or at odds with, a target face. Design/methodology
Autor:
Alex H. McIntyre, Priscilla Heard, Peter J. B. Hancock, Laura Nelson, Faye Collette Skelton, Stephen Fields, Rosie Noyce, Rebecca Atkins, Joanne Henry, David Morgan, Charlie D. Frowd
Publikováno v:
Applied Cognitive Psychology. 26:576-584
Eyewitnesses are often asked to describe the appearance of an offender’s face, normally as part of a cognitive interview (CI), and then to construct a facial composite of it by selecting hair, eyes, nose, etc. Recent research indicates that facial
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether the presence of a whole-face context during facial composite production facilitates construction of facial composite images. Design/methodology/approach – In Experiment 1, constructors
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::29a4952f1c7be2952406499e900d6ec5
Autor:
Amal Hassan, Faye Collette Skelton, Stephen Fields, Neelam Butt, Peter J. B. Hancock, Charlie D. Frowd
Publikováno v:
Ergonomics. 54:1147-1158
We investigate the effect of target familiarity on the construction of facial composites, as used by law enforcement to locate criminal suspects. Two popular software construction methods were investigated. Participants were shown a target face that
Autor:
Dennis C. Hay, Faye Collette Skelton
Publikováno v:
Visual Cognition. 16:419-429
Previous research indicates that unfamiliar faces may be recognized better if they are viewed in motion. This study utilized a three trial learning paradigm to investigate whether unfamiliar faces are learnt more quickly from moving clips than from s
Autor:
William Blake Erickson, Charlie D. Frowd, James Michael Lampinen, Alex H. McIntyre, Peter J. B. Hancock, Faye Collette Skelton
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to assess the impact of seven variables that emerge from forensic research on facial-composite construction and naming using contemporary police systems: EvoFIT, Feature and Sketch. Design/methodology/approach
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::d247637e0866b6405bc63bcd42452a3d
Autor:
Andre Kehn, Glenys A. Holt, Samantha Bouwmeester, M. K. Attaya, John E. Marsh, Jonathan Jong, P. Aucoin, Joshua Conrad Jackson, Nicola Mammarella, Stephen R. H. Langton, René Kopietz, Maria A. Carlson, K. Wiseman, R. Todaro, Calvin K. Lai, Narina Nunez, C. Koch, U. Körner, Maria A. Brandimonte, Daniel V. Zuj, R. Gentry, Angie R. Birt, Emma Portch, Casey Eggleston, Štěpán Bahník, Beth Fairfield, Dawn R. Weatherford, C. Romig, M. Colarusso, Elizabeth Gilbert, Eva Rubínová, Charity Brown, J. E. Pappagianopoulos, S. McCoy, Marilyn S. Petro, John E. Edlund, Jamin Halberstadt, S. Birch, A. Di Domenico, Simon Chu, G. A. Sullivan, D. L. Greenberg, Faye Collette Skelton, Victoria K. Alogna, A. Rancourt, James D. Sauer, K. Buswell, J. Shaheed, Mevagh Sanson, Curt A. Carlson, Austin Lee Nichols, Tara Zaksaite, Joanna Ulatowska, Maryanne Garry, Matthew A. Palmer, Brian H. Bornstein, Alex H. McIntyre, M. Mugayar-Baldocchi, Fiona Gabbert, Melissa F. Colloff, Aaron Drummond, Christopher A. Was, K. A. McConnaughy, Peter J. B. Hancock, Kyle J. Susa, W. B. Thompson, Gregory Franco, Jessica K. Swanner, Tim Valentine, Christian A. Meissner, Bradlee W. Gamblin, A. A. Mitchell, Kimberly S. Dellapaolera, Aleksandra Cislak, Robert B. Michael, Peter P. J. L. Verkoeijen, Gerald Echterhoff, Lauren C. Hall, C. Ng, Fábio Pitombo Leite, Melina A. Kunar, Jean-Francois Delvenne, Rolf A. Zwaan, M. Rainsford, D. Hirsch, Kimberley A. Wade, R. Musselman, Christopher R. Poirier, Liam Satchell, Marek A. Vranka, Kimberly Schweitzer
Trying to remember something now typically improves your ability to remember it later. However, after watching a video of a simulated bank robbery, participants who verbally described the robber were 25% worse at identifying the robber in a lineup th
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::5f0ecc16771def8fa804808c65278726
https://hdl.handle.net/11588/871936
https://hdl.handle.net/11588/871936