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Maria Carlson
Maria Carlson
Associate Professor of Psychology, Texas A&M University - Commerce
Adresse e-mail validée de tamuc.edu - Page d'accueil
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Registered replication report: Schooler and engstler-schooler (1990)
VK Alogna, MK Attaya, P Aucoin, Š Bahník, S Birch, AR Birt, BH Bornstein, ...
Perspectives on Psychological Science 9 (5), 556-578, 2014
2042014
An evaluation of lineup presentation, weapon presence, and a distinctive feature using ROC analysis
CA Carlson, MA Carlson
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 3 (2), 45-53, 2014
962014
An investigation of the weapon focus effect and the confidence–accuracy relationship for eyewitness identification.
CA Carlson, JL Dias, DR Weatherford, MA Carlson
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 6 (1), 82, 2017
882017
Individual differences predict eyewitness identification performance
SM Andersen, CA Carlson, MA Carlson, SD Gronlund
Personality and Individual Differences 60, 36-40, 2014
722014
The influence of perpetrator exposure time and weapon presence/timing on eyewitness confidence and accuracy
CA Carlson, DF Young, DR Weatherford, MA Carlson, JE Bednarz, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 30 (6), 898-910, 2016
452016
Lineup fairness: Propitious heterogeneity and the diagnostic feature-detection hypothesis
CA Carlson, AR Jones, JE Whittington, RF Lockamyeir, MA Carlson, ...
Cognitive research: principles and implications 4, 1-16, 2019
392019
An evaluation of perpetrator distinctiveness, weapon presence, and lineup presentation using ROC analysis
CA Carlson, MA Carlson
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 3 (2), 45-53, 2014
372014
The effect of viewing distance on empirical discriminability and the confidence–accuracy relationship for eyewitness identification
RF Lockamyeir, CA Carlson, AR Jones, MA Carlson, DR Weatherford
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 (5), 1047-1060, 2020
322020
A distinctiveness-driven reversal of the weapon-focus effect.
CA Carlson, MA Carlson
Applied Psychology in Criminal Justice 8 (1), 2012
302012
The number of fillers may not matter as long as they all match the description: The effect of simultaneous lineup size on eyewitness identification
AR Wooten, CA Carlson, RF Lockamyeir, MA Carlson, AR Jones, JL Dias, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 (3), 590-604, 2020
282020
Impact of status and meme content on the spread of memes in virtual communities
G Mazambani, MA Carlson, S Reysen, CF Hempelmann
Human Technology 11, 2015
252015
The effect of backloading instructions on eyewitness identification from simultaneous and sequential lineups
CA Carlson, MA Carlson, DR Weatherford, A Tucker, J Bednarz
Applied Cognitive Psychology 30 (6), 1005-1013, 2016
242016
Relation between parental divorce and adjustment in college students
B Connel, DM Hayes, M Carlson
Journal of Divorce & Remarriage 56 (4), 336-345, 2015
222015
Processing differences between feature‐based facial composites and photos of real faces
CA Carlson, SD Gronlund, DR Weatherford, MA Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 26 (4), 525-540, 2012
222012
Testing encoding specificity and the diagnostic feature-detection theory of eyewitness identification, with implications for showups, lineups, and partially disguised perpetrators
CA Carlson, JA Hemby, AR Wooten, AR Jones, RF Lockamyeir, ...
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 6, 1-21, 2021
142021
A method for increasing empirical discriminability and eliminating top‐row preference in photo arrays
CA Carlson, AR Jones, CA Goodsell, MA Carlson, DR Weatherford, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 33 (6), 1091-1102, 2019
122019
The weapon focus effect: Testing an extension of the unusualness hypothesis
CA Carlson, WE Pleasant, DR Weatherford, MA Carlson, JEBE Bednarz
112016
One perpetrator, two perpetrators: The effect of multiple perpetrators on eyewitness identification
RF Lockamyeir, CA Carlson, AR Jones, AR Wooten, MA Carlson, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 35 (5), 1206-1223, 2021
102021
“All I remember is the black eye”: A distinctive facial feature harms eyewitness identification
AR Jones, CA Carlson, RF Lockamyeir, JA Hemby, MA Carlson, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 (6), 1379-1393, 2020
102020
Asking an eyewitness to predict their later lineup performance could harm the confidence–accuracy relationship
JE Whittington, CA Carlson, MA Carlson, DR Weatherford, LE Krueger, ...
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 (1), 119-131, 2020
72020
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