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Brainerd, C. J.,
Reyna, V. F., & Estrada, S. (2006). Recollection rejection in
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Brewer, N.,
Caon, A., Todd, C. & Weber, N. (2006). Eyewitness identification
accuracy and response latency. Law and Human Behavior, 30, 31-50.
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Brewer, N. &
Wells, G. L. (2006). The confidence-accuracy relationship in
eyewitness identification: Effects of lineup instruction, foil similarity, and
target-absent base rates. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 12, 11-30.
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Corenblum, B.,
& Meissner, C. A. (2006). Recognition of faces of ingroup and
outgroup children and adults. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 93, 187-206.
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Cowley, E.
(2006). Remembering the impressions of others as our own: How post-experience
decisions can distort autobiographical memory. Applied Cognitive Psychology,
20, 227-238.
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Dekle, D. J.
(2006). Viewing composite sketches: Lineups and showups compared. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 20, 383-395.
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Ghetti, S. &
Castelli, P. (2006). Developmental differences in false-event
rejection: Effects of memorability-based warnings. Memory, 14, 762-776.
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Howe, M. L.
(2006). Developmentally invariant dissociations in children’s true and false
memories: Not all relatedness is created equal. Child Development, 77, 1112-1123.
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Lane, S. M.
(2006). Dividing attention during a witnessed event increases eyewitness
suggestibility. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 20, 199-212.
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McDermott, K. B.
(2006). Paradoxical effects of testing: Repeated retrieval attempts enhance the
likelihood of later accurate and false recall. Memory & Cognition, 34,
261-267.
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McKone, E., Xi
Peh, Y. (2006). Memory conjunction errors for realistic faces are
consistent with configural processing. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review,
13, 106-111.
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McQuiston-Surrett,
D., Malpass, R. S., & Tredoux, C. G. (2006). Sequential vs.
simultaneous lineups: A review of methods, data, and theory. Psychology,
Public Policy, and Law, 12, 137-169.
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Principe, G. F.,
Kanaya, T., Ceci, S. J., & Singh, M. (2006). Believing is
seeing: How rumors can engender false memories in preschoolers. Psychological Science, 17, 243-248.
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Seamon, J. G.,
Berko, J. R., Sahlin, B., Yu, Y., Colker, J. M., & Gottfried, D. H.
(2006). Can false memories spontaneously recover? Memory, 14, 415-423.
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Thomas, A. K.,
Bulevich, J. B. (2006). Effective cue utilization reduces memory
errors in older adults. Psychology and Aging, 21, 379-389.