ABSTRACT

Methods, Measures, and Theories in Eyewitness Recognition Tasks provides a comprehensive review of the fundamental issues surrounding eyewitness recognition phenomena alongside suggestions for developing a more methodologically rigorous eyewitness science.

Over the past 40 years, the field of eyewitness science has seen substantial advancement in eyewitness identification procedures, yet theoretical and methodological developments have fallen behind. Featuring contributions from prominent international scholars, this book examines methodological and theoretical limitations and explores important topics, including how to increase the accuracy of identifying perpetrators when using CCTV images, how to create more identifiable facial composites, and the differences in accuracy between younger and older eyewitnesses.

Providing in-depth discussion on the limitations of traditional lineups, eyewitness memory fallibility, and the complications that arise when using laboratory simulations, along with suggestions for new methods, this book will be an invaluable resource for researchers in eyewitness recognition, lawyers, players in the criminal justice system, members of innocence commissions, and researchers with interests in cognitive psychology.

part |240 pages

Identifying Persons

chapter 7|33 pages

A Process Perspective

The Importance of Theory in Eyewitness Identification Research

chapter 10|23 pages

Dealing With Data From Real Witnesses

Methodological and Analytical Considerations

part |51 pages

Special Considerations for Older and Younger Eyewitnesses

chapter 14|28 pages

False Memory

What are the Effects, How Does Fuzzy-Trace Theory Predict Them, and How Does this Matter for Eyewitness Testimony?

part |15 pages

Conclusion

chapter 16|13 pages

Eyewitness Memory

The Next 40 Years