The Weapon Focus Effect: Testing an Extension of the Unusualness Hypothesis

Dawn R. Weatherford , Jane E. Bednarz E. Bednarz , Curt A. Carlson , Maria A. Carlson

2016
Testing encoding specificity and the diagnostic feature-detection theory of eyewitness identification, with implications for showups, lineups, and partially disguised perpetrators

Curt A. Carlson , Jennifer L. Dias , Alyssa R. Jones , Maria A. Carlson
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 6 ( 1) 1 -21

2021
Processing Differences between Feature‐Based Facial Composites and Photos of Real Faces

Curt A. Carlson , Scott D. Gronlund , Dawn R. Weatherford , Maria A. Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 26 ( 4) 525 -540

19
2012
The Influence of Perpetrator Exposure Time and Weapon Presence/Timing on Eyewitness Confidence and Accuracy

Curt A. Carlson , David F. Young , Dawn R. Weatherford , Maria A. Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 30 ( 6) 898 -910

9
2016
The Effect of Backloading Instructions on Eyewitness Identification from Simultaneous and Sequential Lineups

Curt A. Carlson , Maria A. Carlson , Dawn R. Weatherford , Amanda Tucker
Applied Cognitive Psychology 30 ( 6) 1005 -1013

8
2016
ROCs in Eyewitness Identification: Instructions versus Confidence Ratings

Laura Mickes , Travis M. Seale-Carlisle , Stacy A. Wetmore , Scott D. Gronlund
Applied Cognitive Psychology 31 ( 5) 467 -477

15
2017
A method for increasing empirical discriminability and eliminating top‐row preference in photo arrays

Curt A. Carlson , Alyssa R. Jones , Charles A. Goodsell , Maria A. Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 33 ( 6) 1091 -1102

4
2019
Asking an eyewitness to predict their later lineup performance could harm the confidence–accuracy relationship

Jane E. Whittington , Curt A. Carlson , Maria A. Carlson , Dawn R. Weatherford
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 ( 1) 119 -131

1
2020
The Number of Fillers May Not Matter as Long as They All Match the Description: The Effect of Simultaneous Lineup Size on Eyewitness Identification.

Alex R. Wooten , Curt A. Carlson , Robert F. Lockamyeir , Maria A. Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 ( 3) 590 -604

2
2020
The Effect of Viewing Distance on Empirical Discriminability and the Confidence-Accuracy Relationship for Eyewitness Identification.

Robert F. Lockamyeir , Curt A. Carlson , Alyssa R. Jones , Maria A. Carlson
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 ( 5) 1047 -1060

2
2020
“All I remember is the black eye”: A distinctive facial feature harms eyewitness identification

Alyssa R. Jones , Curt A. Carlson , Robert F. Lockamyeir , Jacob A. Hemby
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 ( 6) 1379 -1393

1
2020
The body deconstructed: An unflinching portrayal.

Curt A. Carlson , Jane E. Bednarz
Psyccritiques 61 ( 35)

2016
Robustness of the sequential lineup advantage.

Scott D. Gronlund , Curt A. Carlson , Sarah B. Dailey , Charles A. Goodsell
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 15 ( 2) 140 -152

161
2009
From science to reform: A long and winding road.

Curt A. Carlson
Psyccritiques 58 ( 31)

2013
Individual differences predict eyewitness identification performance

Shannon M. Andersen , Curt A. Carlson , Maria A. Carlson , Scott D. Gronlund
Personality and Individual Differences 60 36 -40

27
2014
Showups versus lineups: An evaluation using ROC analysis

Scott D. Gronlund , Curt A. Carlson , Jeffrey S. Neuschatz , Charles A. Goodsell
Journal of applied research in memory and cognition 1 ( 4) 221 -228

161
2012
An evaluation of lineup presentation, weapon presence, and a distinctive feature using ROC analysis

Curt A. Carlson , Maria A. Carlson
Journal of applied research in memory and cognition 3 ( 2) 45 -53

53
2014
Effect of retention interval on showup and lineup performance

Stacy A. Wetmore , Jeffrey S. Neuschatz , Scott D. Gronlund , Alex Wooten
Journal of applied research in memory and cognition 4 ( 1) 8 -14

46
2015