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Jamal K. Mansour
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Year
Sequential lineup presentation: Patterns and policy
RCL Lindsay, JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, AM Leach, MI Bertrand
Legal and Criminological Psychology 14 (1), 13-24, 2009
652009
Impact of disguise on identification decisions and confidence with simultaneous and sequential lineups.
JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, MI Bertrand, N Kalmet, EI Melsom, RCL Lindsay
Law and human behavior 36 (6), 513, 2012
582012
Characterizing visual behaviour in a lineup task
JK Mansour, RCL Lindsay, N Brewer, KG Munhall
Applied Cognitive Psychology 23 (7), 1012-1026, 2009
442009
Are multiple-trial experiments appropriate for eyewitness identification studies? Accuracy, choosing, and confidence across trials
JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, RCL Lindsay
Behavior research methods 49, 2235-2254, 2017
432017
The effect of evidence type, identification accuracy, line‐up presentation, and line‐up administration on observers' perceptions of eyewitnesses
JL Beaudry, RCL Lindsay, AM Leach, JK Mansour, MI Bertrand, N Kalmet
Legal and Criminological Psychology 20 (2), 343-364, 2015
412015
Evaluating lineup fairness: Variations across methods and measures.
JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, N Kalmet, MI Bertrand, RCL Lindsay
Law and Human Behavior 41 (1), 103, 2017
402017
Face recognition in eyewitness memory
RCL Lindsay, JK Mansour, MI Bertrand, N Kalmet, EI Melsom
The Oxford handbook of face perception, 307-328, 2011
242011
The confidence-accuracy relationship using scale versus other methods of assessing confidence
JK Mansour
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 9 (2), 215-231, 2020
232020
Beyond sequential presentation: Misconceptions and misrepresentations of sequential lineups
RCL Lindsay, JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, AM Leach, MI Bertrand
Legal and Criminological Psychology, 2009
182009
“Only your first yes will count”: The impact of prelineup instructions on sequential lineup decisions.
R Horry, RJ Fitzgerald, JK Mansour
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 27 (1), 170, 2021
162021
Eye tracking and eyewitness memory.
JK Mansour, H Flowe
Loughborough University, 2010
162010
Understanding the weapon focus effect: The role of threat, unusualness, exposure duration, and scene complexity
JK Mansour, CM Hamilton, MT Gibson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 33 (6), 991-1007, 2019
142019
Impact of disguise on identification decisions and confidence with simultaneous and sequential lineups.
JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, MI Bertrand, N Kalmet, EI Melsom, RCL Lindsay
Law and Human Behavior 44 (6), 502, 2020
112020
Collective directional movement and the perception of social cohesion
S Wilson, JK Mansour
British Journal of Social Psychology 59 (4), 819-838, 2020
92020
The element of surprise: The impact of participants' knowledge of a subsequent lineup task
JL Beaudry, AM Leach, JK Mansour, M Bertrand, RCL Lindsay
American Psychology-Law Society, St. Petersburg, FL, 2006
92006
Validity of mock-witness measures for assessing lineup fairness
J Lee, JK Mansour, SD Penrod
Psychology, Crime & Law 28 (3), 215-245, 2022
82022
Examining how lineup practices of Canadian and US police officers adhere to their national best practice recommendations
MI Bertrand, RCL Lindsay, JK Mansour, JL Beaudry, N Kalmet, EI Melsom
Man. LJ 41, 1, 2018
72018
Is increasing lineup size an alternative to sequential presentation? The question revisited and revamped
M Bertrand, J Beaudry, J Mansour, RCL Lindsay
Poster presented at the American Psychology-Law Society, St. Petersburg, Florida, 2006
52006
The effect of pre-event instructions on eyewitness identification
MJ Baldassari, KN Moore, IE Hyman Jr, L Hope, EY Mah, DS Lindsay, ...
Cognitive research: principles and implications 8 (1), 16, 2023
32023
Incidental Learning in Hypemedia Environments: The Impact of Individual Differences and Spatial Overviews
P Boechler, D Steffler, M Dawson, J Mansour
EdMedia+ Innovate Learning, 3789-3794, 2005
32005
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Articles 1–20