This volume provides a tutorial review and evaluation of scientific
research on the accuracy and reliability of eyewitness
identification. The book starts with the perspective that there are
a variety of conceptual and empirical problems with eyewitness
identification as a form of forensic evidence, just as there are a
variety of problems with other forms of forensic evidence. There is
then an examination of the important results in the study of
eyewitness memory and the implications of this research for
psychological theory and for social and legal policy. The volume
takes the perspective that research on eyewitness identification
can be seen as the paradigmatic example of how psychological
science can be successfully applied to real-world problems.
General
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