Deck 5: Eyewitnesses to Crimes and Accidents

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Question
System variables are

A)systematic.
B)uncontrollable.
C)controllable.
D)unsystematic.
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Question
The presence of a weapon during the witnessing of a crime often affects

A)attention and recall.
B)auditory processing.
C)language comprehension.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
In one of Loftus's studies, a first group of subjects was asked how fast the car was going "when it ran the stop sign" whereas a second group was asked how fast the car was going "when it turned right." When later asked if they had seen a stop sign,

A)75% of the first group said yes; 53% of the second group said yes.
B)53% of the first group said yes; 35% of the second group said yes.
C)37% of the first group said yes; 35% of the second group said yes.
D)14% of the first group said yes; 34% of the second group said yes.
Question
Bob was attacked by a drunken man with a knife. It is possible that the presence of this weapon affected Bob's memory of

A)the perpetrator's face and what he did.
B)what the perpetrator said and had in another hand.
C)the perpetrator's face and what he said.
D)the perpetrator's face only.
Question
_________________________ is when someone unconsciously selects the information he or she will focus on and process most likely because of having a limited attentional capacity and an inability to process a lot of information at one time.

A)Confirmation bias
B)Selective attention
C)Memory repression
D)Crime focus
Question
Diane was the sole witness to a crime. After witnessing the crime, she talked with her husband and her co-workers about what she saw. These discussions potentially can taint her memory of the crime event for it can

A)introduce her to those who saw the crime from a different vantage point.
B)depress her.
C)decrease the chance of her talking to the police about what she saw.
D)introduce post-event information that may alter her memory for the original event.
Question
Last night Laura was robbed at gunpoint. When asked to describe the perpetrator, she found that all she could remember was the gun and not the way the perpetrator looked. Which of the best following describes this circumstance?

A)Forced weapon encoding
B)Weapon present effect
C)Crime attention effect
D)Weapon focus effect
Question
Sometimes police just look for evidence that implicates a suspect that has been identified by an eyewitness and stop investigating any other leads. This situation illustrates

A)illusory correlation.
B)confirmation bias.
C)police attention outlook.
D)an investigative freeze.
Question
Meta-analyses of 53 studies showed that the longer the retention interval,

A)the less memory loss for previously-seen faces.
B)the more memory loss for previously-seen faces.
C)the less memory loss for newly-seen faces.
D)There is no change in memory for previously-seen faces.
Question
According to the Innocence Project, 2015, mistaken identifications account for _________ of wrongful convictions revealed by DNA tests; more than false confessions, problems with snitches, and defective or fraudulent science combined.

A)72%
B)58%
C)64%
D)88%
Question
During an extremely stressful situation, how is encoding affected?

A)It becomes more accurate.
B)It is often incomplete.
C)It gets more thorough and detailed.
D)It is not affected, but storage and retrieval are.
Question
A robbery occurs at a liquor store. The clerk identifies the defendant in a police lineup. The defendant claims he had been in the store earlier to get change, but had not robbed the store. If the defendant is telling the truth, the clerk's identification would reflect

A)unconscious dreaming.
B)a confabulation.
C)extreme suggestibility.
D)unconscious transference.
Question
A researcher had one group of study participants witness a staged crime in which an older perpetrator stole items from a desk. A second group of study participants witness a staged crime in which a younger perpetrator stole the same items from the desk. After witnessing the crime, the witnesses are asked to report what they saw. The value of doing an experiment and controlling what is presented is that the researcher knows exactly what the witnesses saw. This is called

A)hit rate.
B)ground truth.
C)ecological.
D)system variables.
Question
______________are the leading cause of wrongful convictions, particularly in cases of robbery and sexual assaults.

A)False confessions
B)Lost and/or lack of evidence
C)Eyewitness errors
D)None of these are correct.
Question
In one study of soldiers' ability to make eyewitness identifications after being exposed to varying levels of stress in an interrogation, only ______ of soldiers who experienced high stress were able to make correct identifications.

A)17%
B)25%
C)34%
D)52%
Question
Which of the following would be considered an estimator variable in the dichotomy of eyewitness identification variables provided by Gary Wells?

A)Line-up instructions
B)Photo spread composition
C)Lighting conditions at the time of the crime
D)None of these are correct.
Question
Mistakes in the identification process typically occur

A)during the investigation of a crime.
B)at the moment a crime is committed.
C)both at the moment a crime is committed and during the investigation of a crime.
D)only when certain environmental factors are present.
Question
Only ____ states have laws that compensate individuals who were wrongly imprisoned.

A)11
B)18
C)32
D)38
Question
In 2009, the Supreme Court ruled that states are not required to make DNA evidence available to convicted offenders, due to which

A)wrongly convicted people escaped harsh punishment.
B)convicted innocent people could not prove their innocence.
C)the real perpetrators were convicted.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
The case of Calvin C. Johnson provides an example of _________________________, or cases in which the police stop investigating other leads and focus only developing evidence against the suspects identified by eyewitnesses and believed to be guilty.

A)confirmation bias
B)prosecutorial discretion
C)police officer discretion
D)None of these are correct.
Question
Results of a meta-analysis of 65 experiments examining the effectiveness of the cognitive interview suggest the cognitive interview

A)diminishes the likelihood of correct recall.
B)increases correct recall.
C)increases correct recall, but also increases the recall of incorrect details.
D)decreases recall of incorrect details and increases correct recall overall.
Question
For a white eyewitness to correctly identify a black culprit, those who provide a cognitive interpretation of the other race effect, a physiognomic variability approach, might suggest that the eyewitness

A)focus on encoding the culprit's hair color.
B)focus on encoding the culprit's skin tone.
C)focus on encoding the culprit's eye color.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
State v. Henderson (2011)relied on social science research when

A)identifying the factors judges should consider when evaluating an eyewitness identification.
B)concluding hypnosis is appropriate during eyewitness interviews.
C)outlining the required criteria for line-up procedures.
D)ruling hypnotized identifications are inherently unreliable.
Question
A line-up procedure in which the police officers administrating the line-up and the eyewitness making the identification are both unaware of the potential suspect would reflect

A)an experimenter bias.
B)a double-blind procedure.
C)an unreliable identification procedure.
D)None of these are correct.
Question
The cognitive interview that emphasizes context reinstatement would not involve

A)follow-up questions.
B)hypnotizing the victim.
C)having the victim recall the events in backward order.
D)telling the victim to remember the emotion he or she was feeling.
Question
Recent research suggests that women are ____________ at recognizing male faces than female faces.

A)better
B)worse
C)equally poor
D)just as good
Question
The other race effect refers to the idea that

A)eyewitnesses are usually better at recognizing and identifying members of their own race or ethnic group than members of another race or ethnic group.
B)those selecting a jury should strive to have jurors who are the same race or ethnicity as the defendant.
C)those creating a line-up should make sure that all the distractors (i.e., non-suspects)are not of another race from the stated race of the suspect.
D)eyewitnesses are usually worse at recognizing and identifying members of their own race or ethnic group than members of another race or ethnic group.
Question
Which of the following represents social psychologists' explanation for the other race effect?

A)The social diversity theory
B)In-group/out-group differences
C)Physiognomic variability
D)The ethnicity fallacy
Question
Which of the following would be considered a postdiction variable?

A)The line-up instructions
B)The photo spread composition
C)The lighting conditions at the time of the crime
D)The confidence that a witness feels
Question
In a meta-analysis comparing simultaneous and sequential presentations in line-up procedures, mistaken identifications were reduced by about ________ when presentations were _______________________ and correct identifications were reduced by ________ when presentations were __________________________.

A)22%, sequential; 8%, sequential
B)8%, simultaneous; 22%, simultaneous
C)22%, sequential; 8%, simultaneous
D)8%, simultaneous; 22%, sequential
Question
According to the in-group/out-group differences hypothesis, when we encounter someone from the same race or ethnic group as ourselves, we immediately devote our attention to distinguishing that person from other members of the in-group. This is an explanation of why we tend to be

A)incapable of seeing the differences between our ethnic group or race and others.
B)better at identifying those within our own ethnic group or race than those from other races or ethnic groups.
C)likely to have an easier time identifying those from another ethnic group or race than those of our own.
D)extremely confident when identifying members of our own ethnic group or race.
Question
Which of the following is a true statement regarding how the age of an eyewitness tends to impact lineup identifications?

A)Older adults and young children are more likely to make a mistaken identification in a lineup in which the perpetrator is absent than young and middle-aged adults.
B)Older adults and young children are less likely to make a mistaken identification in a lineup in which the perpetrator is absent than young and middle-aged adults.
C)Older adults and young children do not perform as well as younger adults when the perpetrator is present in the lineup.
D)Young adults routinely outperform older adults and young children on eyewitness tasks involving lineup identification.
Question
Thomas is the victim of a crime, and he has been called down to the police station to view a lineup. After some thought, he chooses the fourth person from the left. The detective administering the lineup says, "Good, we thought that was the one." What is likely the result of this confirming feedback?

A)Thomas is unwilling to testify at the trial.
B)Thomas now has doubts about this person's face with that of the one in his memories of the crime.
C)Thomas feels more confident about his identification.
D)Thomas is willing to testify but has doubts about his choice.
Question
Which of the following is true?

A)Current evidence suggests that women as opposed to men are much more likely to make accurate eyewitness identifications.
B)Current evidence suggests that men as opposed to women are much more likely to make accurate eyewitness identifications.
C)Current evidence suggests that neither gender is superior to the other with regard to making accurate eyewitness identifications.
D)None of these are true as, surprisingly, researchers have not yet investigated this topic.
Question
__________________________________ refers to the differences between faces of one race and faces of another race in terms of the variability in facial features.

A)Physiognomic variability
B)Dermatological variability
C)Facial recognition variability
D)Racial feature variability
Question
Greg is viewing a lineup with simultaneous presentation. He had told police that the person he saw commit the crime is white with light color hair. When presented with six white people in his lineup, he chooses the person who has the lightest color hair in the group. How would we best characterize this judgment?

A)It is an absolute judgment.
B)It is a precision judgment.
C)It is a relative judgment.
D)It is a discrepancy judgment.
Question
What is the recommendation regarding the selection of fillers for a lineup?

A)Do not put more than six people (five fillers and the suspect)in a lineup.
B)Have all members (fillers and the suspect)of the lineup match the witness's description.
C)All fillers should sound similar to the suspect.
D)Fillers should be those who are well versed in lineup procedures.
Question
Researchers have found that one of the following is preferable for lineups in most situations. Which one?

A)Sequential presentation
B)Simultaneous presentation
C)Elimination lineup
D)Showup
Question
Researchers recommend that a person conducting a lineup should tell the witness that the culprit may or may not be present in the lineup. Without this instruction, what tends to happen?

A)False identifications tend to decrease.
B)The eyewitness may feel the pressure to choose someone.
C)The eyewitness may assume that their task is to pick someone so tends to choose the person who most resembles the person they witnessed.
D)None of these are correct.
Question
In a simultaneous presentation lineup _________________ is used, whereas in a sequential presentation lineup ___________________ is used.

A)relative judgment; absolute judgment
B)absolute judgment; relative judgment
C)precision judgment; discrepancy judgment
D)discrepancy judgment; precision judgment
Question
Research tends to show that the relationship between the accuracy of an eyewitness' testimony and the eyewitness' confidence or certainty is

A)relatively strong.
B)relatively weak.
C)strong when the eyewitness is a female and weak when the eyewitness is a male.
D)strong only when the eyewitness was under stress while observing the crime.
Question
Priebe and Svedin identified in a study which involved interviews of high school students, only ______ of students have reported experiences of unwanted sexual abuse.

A)32%
B)24%
C)45%
D)50%
Question
The Telfaire instruction has been found to ______________ mock jurors' sensitivity to eyewitness evidence.

A)increase
B)decrease
C)not affect
D)None of these are correct., as the Telfaire instruction does not address eyewitness evidence.
Question
Six-year-old Corey is a witness to a crime, and he has been asked to view a lineup. Unfortunately, the true perpetrator is not in the lineup. Researchers would predict that Corey, as compared to adults,

A)would be more likely to make a false positive error.
B)would be more likely to make a false negative error.
C)would be less likely to make a false positive error.
D)would be less likely to make a false negative error.
Question
In Coy v. Iowa (1988)the Supreme Court overturned Coy's conviction because

A)the one-way screen placed in front of him caused the jury to presume he was guilty.
B)the one-way screen placed in front of him deprived him of his opportunity to confront his accusers.
C)the one-way screen placed in front of him did not allow him his right of cross-examination.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
Multiple interviews using open-ended questions may be helpful when interviewing children because of

A)practice effects.
B)the reminiscence effect.
C)the suggestive effects.
D)None of these are correct.
Question
Which of the following is an effective way to eliminate false confidence in eyewitness identifications?

A)Asking the witness to provide a statement of certainty before the lineup administrator provides any feedback
B)Using unbiased lineup instructions
C)Using similar looking fillers in a lineup
D)Using sequential, not simultaneous presentation, in a lineup
Question
If one is questioning a child witness, what features would be incorporated in a good investigative interview?

A)A good interviewer would ask the child to describe the event in his or her own words before asking specific questions.
B)A good interview protocol would discourage the use of suggestive questions.
C)Both A and B
D)Neither A nor B
Question
Research suggests jurors overestimate eyewitness accuracy because

A)they assume eyewitnesses are accurate and have credible memories.
B)they believe eyewitness testimony reflects memory quality, not questioning or line up procedures.
C)they trust eyewitness's over-confidence in their identifications.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
Which of these is not a reason given by judges when they decide not to let psychologists testify as expert witnesses regarding the accuracy of eyewitness identification?

A)The testimony psychologists would give is just common sense.
B)The testimony would make jurors skeptical of all eyewitnesses.
C)It could lead to a "battle of experts."
D)For courtroom testimony, expert witnesses require a medical degree, and psychologists do not have this degree.
Question
Which of the following has been shown to play a role in the nonsuggestive questioning of child witnesses?

A)Suggestive questions
B)Social influence
C)Selective reinforcement of answers
D)Open-ended questions
Question
Goodman and her colleagues (1998)found that the use of one-way closed-circuit television to present the testimony of a child had which of the following effects?

A)The children were viewed as more believable than children who testified in open court.
B)It generally resulted in more accurate testimony.
C)It generally resulted in less accurate testimony.
D)Both A and B
Question
Alexander et al. (2005)contacted adolescents and young adults who had been involved in a study years earlier that was conducted to assess the effects of criminal prosecutions on child abuse victims. These researchers asked respondents to indicate which events had previously happened to them and which event was the most traumatic. What did these researchers find?

A)Respondents who designated child sexual abuse as their most traumatic experience were not very accurate in reporting the details of their experiences.
B)Respondents who designated child sexual abuse as their most traumatic experience were very accurate in reporting the details of their experiences.
C)Surprisingly, most respondents did not report that child sexual abuse happened to them.
D)Although some respondents did report that they had experienced child sexual abuse, they often downplayed the seriousness of the event.
Question
Some children have experienced multiple incidents of sexual abuse. What tends to happen to a child's recall of repeated events?

A)Although repetition enhances memory for aspects of the event that are held constant, it impairs the ability to recall details that vary with each recurrence.
B)Repetition enhances memory for both the aspects of the event that are held constant and the ones that vary with each recurrence.
C)Repetition impairs memory for both the aspects of the event that are held constant and those that vary.
D)Repetition impairs memory for aspects of the event that are held constant, although source memory tends to improve.
Question
Children over the age of six can make reasonably reliable identifications from lineups as long as

A)the child has an above average IQ.
B)the perpetrator is in the lineup and is in contact with the perpetrator.
C)the child has photographic memory.
D)Both B and C
Question
Specific questioning of children is problematic because

A)it requires children to relive the moments.
B)it is suggestive and often leading.
C)increases the risk of obtaining inaccurate information along with accurate information
D)All of these are correct.
Question
Child witnesses are generally viewed as ______ credible than adult witnesses; child victims in a sexual abuse case are viewed as ______ credible than adults.

A)less; more
B)more; less
C)less; less
D)more; more
Question
Which of the following was found by Brewer and Burke (2002)to have a strong impact on jurors' verdict decisions?

A)The witness' level of anxiety
B)The witness' level of confidence
C)Whether the witness was a victim or an observer (observer is better)
D)Whether the witness was hypnotized
Question
In Maryland v. Craig (1990), the court upheld a Maryland law permitting

A)hearsay testimony from a child witness.
B)placement of a one-way screen in front of the accused.
C)use of a one-way closed-circuit television to present a child's testimony.
D)use of the cognitive interview when questioning children.
Question
Loftus (1974)gave subjects a description of an armed robbery. Eighteen percent presented with only circumstantial evidence convicted the defendant. When an eyewitness' identification was provided in addition to the circumstantial evidence, what percentage convicted the defendant?

A)18% of the jurors convicted him
B)25% of the jurors convicted him
C)42% of the jurors convicted him
D)72% of the jurors convicted him
Question
When witnesses from an event were brought in for questioning four weeks after the incident occurred, it was found that much of their memory had faded as a consequence of ______.

A)retention interval
B)post-event information
C)repression
D)confirmation bias
Question
Scientists believe that there are at least two kinds of recovered memories of CSA: those that are gradually recovered in the context of suggestive therapy and the other being

A)using hypnosis to make them recollect the past.
B)as an eyewitness identify the perpetrator from the lineup.
C)memories recovered spontaneously.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
Angie was a witness to a crime event. During witness identification a week later, neither she nor the lineup administrator was aware of the suspect's identity. This is a case of ______.

A)retention interval
B)archival analysis
C)double-blind testing
D)post-event information
Question
Emotionally-motivated forgetting that is hypothesized to result from traumatic experiences is called

A)repression.
B)natural forgetting.
C)dissociation.
D)confabulation.
Question
A witness chooses a filler from a line up during witness identification, thus leading to a wrongful conviction. Which of the following will help prove the wrongful conviction and examine features of the cases that could have led to the mistaken verdict?

A)Experimental methodology
B)Ground truth
C)Archival analysis
D)Post-event information
Question
Loftus and Pickrell (1995)constructed a false story about being lost at the age of five while shopping. They had subjects read this story, and write about what they remembered about the event. What approximate percentage of subjects remembered this event that never happened?

A)10%
B)25%
C)50%
D)75%
Question
In Linda Williams' (1994)study, why did women not report sexual abuse experienced as a child?

A)They might have repressed it or were too young to be aware of the abuse or may not be ready to share the information.
B)They were so young when it happened; they were terrified to report
C)They were unwilling to share this information as the perpetrator was a family member.
D)None of these are correct.
Question
Psychologists as an experiment asked the participants to imagine events that never occurred by doctoring family photographs. What is the effect of this fabrication of events?

A)Merely imagining or viewing a photo associated with a fabricated event does not have any effect on the memories.
B)Merely imagining or viewing a photo associated with a fabricated event can dramatically increase the rate of false memories.
C)Merely imagining associated with a fabricated event can differentiate the false memories from the actual events
D)None of these are correct.
Question
In 2009, the Texas legislature passed a compensation law rolling back the Supreme Court order that dictates that "states are not required to provide _________ to convicted offenders."

A)expert testimony
B)DNA testing
C)conjugal visits
D)bail
Question
Which of the following is true of children serving as witnesses?

A)Children ages five and older tend to make significantly erroneous identifications from lineups.
B)Children tend to select someone from the lineup when making an identification from a lineup in which the suspect is absent.
C)Children are generally more accurate than adults when making an identification from a lineup in which the suspect is absent.
D)Children ages five and older make mistakes in identification but are least liable to make a false-positive error.
Question
Twenty-eight year old Stephanie was in a study in which she was asked questions about the abuse she suffered when she was a very young child (this abuse was well documented by medical reports that Stephanie has not seen). Stephanie insists that she did not experience abuse. Which of the following could explain why Stephanie is not reporting this well-documented abuse?

A)She repressed memories of the abuse.
B)Stephanie was so young when it happened; she wasn't fully aware of the abuse.
C)Stephanie does remember the abuse; she doesn't want to divulge this information to the researcher.
D)All of these are correct.
Question
An unconscious process in which victims of abuse escape the full impact of an event by psychologically detaching themselves from it is called

A)repression.
B)natural forgetting.
C)dissociation.
D)confabulation.
Question
Which of the following has not been used by "memory focused" psychotherapists?

A)Diary writing
B)Sibling report
C)Sodium amytal ("truth serum")
D)Hypnosis
Question
Which of the following has been used in court in an attempt to lessen a child's trauma when testifying?

A)A one-way screen has been placed in front of the defendant
B)The child has testified on closed-circuit television
C)Permit a support person to sit with the child during testimony
D)All of these are correct.
Question
The physical appearance of an ethnic group of people causing changes in the witness identification is a case of ______.

A)other-race effect
B)physiognomic variability
C)source confusion
D)Absolute judgment
Question
Factors such as the lighting conditions at the time of the crime and whether the culprit was wearing a disguise are examples of ______ variables.

A)system
B)estimator
C)postdiction
D)physiognomic
Question
Which of the following best describes the condition of repression?

A)Suppressing painful or hurtful feeling within the unconscious mind
B)Failing to perceive all available stimuli in the presence of a weapon
C)Judging another person based on his childhood memories
D)Looking for, interpreting, and creating information that verifies an existing belief
Question
In the Case of Larry Fuller and the victim who "never wavered," Larry's photo was shown in two different photospreads during witness identification; this caused _________ in the mind of the victim while identifying the suspects.

A)post-event exposure
B)unconscious transference
C)other-race effect
D)ecphoric experience
Question
Which of the following situations is a good example of ecphoric experience?

A)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of having seen him previously at some place or event.
B)A witness identifies a suspect based on a subjective sense of recognition based on a good memory and a good likeness of the perpetrator in the lineup.
C)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of post-event information that conforms to his beliefs.
D)A witness identifies a suspect during a prolonged experience of transference in a therapeutic context.
Question
In the witness identification process, which best describes the other-race effect?

A)The witness wrongly identifies a suspect because of their inability to distinguish physical features of a person from another race.
B)A witness identifies a suspect based on a subjective sense of recognition based on a good memory and a good likeness of the perpetrator in the lineup.
C)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of post-event information that conforms to his beliefs.
D)A witness wrongly identifies a suspect during a prolonged experience of transference in a therapeutic context.
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Deck 5: Eyewitnesses to Crimes and Accidents
1
System variables are

A)systematic.
B)uncontrollable.
C)controllable.
D)unsystematic.
controllable.
2
The presence of a weapon during the witnessing of a crime often affects

A)attention and recall.
B)auditory processing.
C)language comprehension.
D)All of these are correct.
All of these are correct.
3
In one of Loftus's studies, a first group of subjects was asked how fast the car was going "when it ran the stop sign" whereas a second group was asked how fast the car was going "when it turned right." When later asked if they had seen a stop sign,

A)75% of the first group said yes; 53% of the second group said yes.
B)53% of the first group said yes; 35% of the second group said yes.
C)37% of the first group said yes; 35% of the second group said yes.
D)14% of the first group said yes; 34% of the second group said yes.
53% of the first group said yes; 35% of the second group said yes.
4
Bob was attacked by a drunken man with a knife. It is possible that the presence of this weapon affected Bob's memory of

A)the perpetrator's face and what he did.
B)what the perpetrator said and had in another hand.
C)the perpetrator's face and what he said.
D)the perpetrator's face only.
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5
_________________________ is when someone unconsciously selects the information he or she will focus on and process most likely because of having a limited attentional capacity and an inability to process a lot of information at one time.

A)Confirmation bias
B)Selective attention
C)Memory repression
D)Crime focus
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6
Diane was the sole witness to a crime. After witnessing the crime, she talked with her husband and her co-workers about what she saw. These discussions potentially can taint her memory of the crime event for it can

A)introduce her to those who saw the crime from a different vantage point.
B)depress her.
C)decrease the chance of her talking to the police about what she saw.
D)introduce post-event information that may alter her memory for the original event.
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7
Last night Laura was robbed at gunpoint. When asked to describe the perpetrator, she found that all she could remember was the gun and not the way the perpetrator looked. Which of the best following describes this circumstance?

A)Forced weapon encoding
B)Weapon present effect
C)Crime attention effect
D)Weapon focus effect
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8
Sometimes police just look for evidence that implicates a suspect that has been identified by an eyewitness and stop investigating any other leads. This situation illustrates

A)illusory correlation.
B)confirmation bias.
C)police attention outlook.
D)an investigative freeze.
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9
Meta-analyses of 53 studies showed that the longer the retention interval,

A)the less memory loss for previously-seen faces.
B)the more memory loss for previously-seen faces.
C)the less memory loss for newly-seen faces.
D)There is no change in memory for previously-seen faces.
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10
According to the Innocence Project, 2015, mistaken identifications account for _________ of wrongful convictions revealed by DNA tests; more than false confessions, problems with snitches, and defective or fraudulent science combined.

A)72%
B)58%
C)64%
D)88%
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11
During an extremely stressful situation, how is encoding affected?

A)It becomes more accurate.
B)It is often incomplete.
C)It gets more thorough and detailed.
D)It is not affected, but storage and retrieval are.
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12
A robbery occurs at a liquor store. The clerk identifies the defendant in a police lineup. The defendant claims he had been in the store earlier to get change, but had not robbed the store. If the defendant is telling the truth, the clerk's identification would reflect

A)unconscious dreaming.
B)a confabulation.
C)extreme suggestibility.
D)unconscious transference.
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13
A researcher had one group of study participants witness a staged crime in which an older perpetrator stole items from a desk. A second group of study participants witness a staged crime in which a younger perpetrator stole the same items from the desk. After witnessing the crime, the witnesses are asked to report what they saw. The value of doing an experiment and controlling what is presented is that the researcher knows exactly what the witnesses saw. This is called

A)hit rate.
B)ground truth.
C)ecological.
D)system variables.
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14
______________are the leading cause of wrongful convictions, particularly in cases of robbery and sexual assaults.

A)False confessions
B)Lost and/or lack of evidence
C)Eyewitness errors
D)None of these are correct.
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15
In one study of soldiers' ability to make eyewitness identifications after being exposed to varying levels of stress in an interrogation, only ______ of soldiers who experienced high stress were able to make correct identifications.

A)17%
B)25%
C)34%
D)52%
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16
Which of the following would be considered an estimator variable in the dichotomy of eyewitness identification variables provided by Gary Wells?

A)Line-up instructions
B)Photo spread composition
C)Lighting conditions at the time of the crime
D)None of these are correct.
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17
Mistakes in the identification process typically occur

A)during the investigation of a crime.
B)at the moment a crime is committed.
C)both at the moment a crime is committed and during the investigation of a crime.
D)only when certain environmental factors are present.
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18
Only ____ states have laws that compensate individuals who were wrongly imprisoned.

A)11
B)18
C)32
D)38
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19
In 2009, the Supreme Court ruled that states are not required to make DNA evidence available to convicted offenders, due to which

A)wrongly convicted people escaped harsh punishment.
B)convicted innocent people could not prove their innocence.
C)the real perpetrators were convicted.
D)All of these are correct.
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20
The case of Calvin C. Johnson provides an example of _________________________, or cases in which the police stop investigating other leads and focus only developing evidence against the suspects identified by eyewitnesses and believed to be guilty.

A)confirmation bias
B)prosecutorial discretion
C)police officer discretion
D)None of these are correct.
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21
Results of a meta-analysis of 65 experiments examining the effectiveness of the cognitive interview suggest the cognitive interview

A)diminishes the likelihood of correct recall.
B)increases correct recall.
C)increases correct recall, but also increases the recall of incorrect details.
D)decreases recall of incorrect details and increases correct recall overall.
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22
For a white eyewitness to correctly identify a black culprit, those who provide a cognitive interpretation of the other race effect, a physiognomic variability approach, might suggest that the eyewitness

A)focus on encoding the culprit's hair color.
B)focus on encoding the culprit's skin tone.
C)focus on encoding the culprit's eye color.
D)All of these are correct.
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23
State v. Henderson (2011)relied on social science research when

A)identifying the factors judges should consider when evaluating an eyewitness identification.
B)concluding hypnosis is appropriate during eyewitness interviews.
C)outlining the required criteria for line-up procedures.
D)ruling hypnotized identifications are inherently unreliable.
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24
A line-up procedure in which the police officers administrating the line-up and the eyewitness making the identification are both unaware of the potential suspect would reflect

A)an experimenter bias.
B)a double-blind procedure.
C)an unreliable identification procedure.
D)None of these are correct.
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25
The cognitive interview that emphasizes context reinstatement would not involve

A)follow-up questions.
B)hypnotizing the victim.
C)having the victim recall the events in backward order.
D)telling the victim to remember the emotion he or she was feeling.
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26
Recent research suggests that women are ____________ at recognizing male faces than female faces.

A)better
B)worse
C)equally poor
D)just as good
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27
The other race effect refers to the idea that

A)eyewitnesses are usually better at recognizing and identifying members of their own race or ethnic group than members of another race or ethnic group.
B)those selecting a jury should strive to have jurors who are the same race or ethnicity as the defendant.
C)those creating a line-up should make sure that all the distractors (i.e., non-suspects)are not of another race from the stated race of the suspect.
D)eyewitnesses are usually worse at recognizing and identifying members of their own race or ethnic group than members of another race or ethnic group.
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28
Which of the following represents social psychologists' explanation for the other race effect?

A)The social diversity theory
B)In-group/out-group differences
C)Physiognomic variability
D)The ethnicity fallacy
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29
Which of the following would be considered a postdiction variable?

A)The line-up instructions
B)The photo spread composition
C)The lighting conditions at the time of the crime
D)The confidence that a witness feels
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30
In a meta-analysis comparing simultaneous and sequential presentations in line-up procedures, mistaken identifications were reduced by about ________ when presentations were _______________________ and correct identifications were reduced by ________ when presentations were __________________________.

A)22%, sequential; 8%, sequential
B)8%, simultaneous; 22%, simultaneous
C)22%, sequential; 8%, simultaneous
D)8%, simultaneous; 22%, sequential
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31
According to the in-group/out-group differences hypothesis, when we encounter someone from the same race or ethnic group as ourselves, we immediately devote our attention to distinguishing that person from other members of the in-group. This is an explanation of why we tend to be

A)incapable of seeing the differences between our ethnic group or race and others.
B)better at identifying those within our own ethnic group or race than those from other races or ethnic groups.
C)likely to have an easier time identifying those from another ethnic group or race than those of our own.
D)extremely confident when identifying members of our own ethnic group or race.
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32
Which of the following is a true statement regarding how the age of an eyewitness tends to impact lineup identifications?

A)Older adults and young children are more likely to make a mistaken identification in a lineup in which the perpetrator is absent than young and middle-aged adults.
B)Older adults and young children are less likely to make a mistaken identification in a lineup in which the perpetrator is absent than young and middle-aged adults.
C)Older adults and young children do not perform as well as younger adults when the perpetrator is present in the lineup.
D)Young adults routinely outperform older adults and young children on eyewitness tasks involving lineup identification.
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33
Thomas is the victim of a crime, and he has been called down to the police station to view a lineup. After some thought, he chooses the fourth person from the left. The detective administering the lineup says, "Good, we thought that was the one." What is likely the result of this confirming feedback?

A)Thomas is unwilling to testify at the trial.
B)Thomas now has doubts about this person's face with that of the one in his memories of the crime.
C)Thomas feels more confident about his identification.
D)Thomas is willing to testify but has doubts about his choice.
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34
Which of the following is true?

A)Current evidence suggests that women as opposed to men are much more likely to make accurate eyewitness identifications.
B)Current evidence suggests that men as opposed to women are much more likely to make accurate eyewitness identifications.
C)Current evidence suggests that neither gender is superior to the other with regard to making accurate eyewitness identifications.
D)None of these are true as, surprisingly, researchers have not yet investigated this topic.
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35
__________________________________ refers to the differences between faces of one race and faces of another race in terms of the variability in facial features.

A)Physiognomic variability
B)Dermatological variability
C)Facial recognition variability
D)Racial feature variability
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36
Greg is viewing a lineup with simultaneous presentation. He had told police that the person he saw commit the crime is white with light color hair. When presented with six white people in his lineup, he chooses the person who has the lightest color hair in the group. How would we best characterize this judgment?

A)It is an absolute judgment.
B)It is a precision judgment.
C)It is a relative judgment.
D)It is a discrepancy judgment.
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37
What is the recommendation regarding the selection of fillers for a lineup?

A)Do not put more than six people (five fillers and the suspect)in a lineup.
B)Have all members (fillers and the suspect)of the lineup match the witness's description.
C)All fillers should sound similar to the suspect.
D)Fillers should be those who are well versed in lineup procedures.
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38
Researchers have found that one of the following is preferable for lineups in most situations. Which one?

A)Sequential presentation
B)Simultaneous presentation
C)Elimination lineup
D)Showup
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39
Researchers recommend that a person conducting a lineup should tell the witness that the culprit may or may not be present in the lineup. Without this instruction, what tends to happen?

A)False identifications tend to decrease.
B)The eyewitness may feel the pressure to choose someone.
C)The eyewitness may assume that their task is to pick someone so tends to choose the person who most resembles the person they witnessed.
D)None of these are correct.
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40
In a simultaneous presentation lineup _________________ is used, whereas in a sequential presentation lineup ___________________ is used.

A)relative judgment; absolute judgment
B)absolute judgment; relative judgment
C)precision judgment; discrepancy judgment
D)discrepancy judgment; precision judgment
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41
Research tends to show that the relationship between the accuracy of an eyewitness' testimony and the eyewitness' confidence or certainty is

A)relatively strong.
B)relatively weak.
C)strong when the eyewitness is a female and weak when the eyewitness is a male.
D)strong only when the eyewitness was under stress while observing the crime.
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42
Priebe and Svedin identified in a study which involved interviews of high school students, only ______ of students have reported experiences of unwanted sexual abuse.

A)32%
B)24%
C)45%
D)50%
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43
The Telfaire instruction has been found to ______________ mock jurors' sensitivity to eyewitness evidence.

A)increase
B)decrease
C)not affect
D)None of these are correct., as the Telfaire instruction does not address eyewitness evidence.
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44
Six-year-old Corey is a witness to a crime, and he has been asked to view a lineup. Unfortunately, the true perpetrator is not in the lineup. Researchers would predict that Corey, as compared to adults,

A)would be more likely to make a false positive error.
B)would be more likely to make a false negative error.
C)would be less likely to make a false positive error.
D)would be less likely to make a false negative error.
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45
In Coy v. Iowa (1988)the Supreme Court overturned Coy's conviction because

A)the one-way screen placed in front of him caused the jury to presume he was guilty.
B)the one-way screen placed in front of him deprived him of his opportunity to confront his accusers.
C)the one-way screen placed in front of him did not allow him his right of cross-examination.
D)All of these are correct.
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46
Multiple interviews using open-ended questions may be helpful when interviewing children because of

A)practice effects.
B)the reminiscence effect.
C)the suggestive effects.
D)None of these are correct.
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47
Which of the following is an effective way to eliminate false confidence in eyewitness identifications?

A)Asking the witness to provide a statement of certainty before the lineup administrator provides any feedback
B)Using unbiased lineup instructions
C)Using similar looking fillers in a lineup
D)Using sequential, not simultaneous presentation, in a lineup
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48
If one is questioning a child witness, what features would be incorporated in a good investigative interview?

A)A good interviewer would ask the child to describe the event in his or her own words before asking specific questions.
B)A good interview protocol would discourage the use of suggestive questions.
C)Both A and B
D)Neither A nor B
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49
Research suggests jurors overestimate eyewitness accuracy because

A)they assume eyewitnesses are accurate and have credible memories.
B)they believe eyewitness testimony reflects memory quality, not questioning or line up procedures.
C)they trust eyewitness's over-confidence in their identifications.
D)All of these are correct.
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50
Which of these is not a reason given by judges when they decide not to let psychologists testify as expert witnesses regarding the accuracy of eyewitness identification?

A)The testimony psychologists would give is just common sense.
B)The testimony would make jurors skeptical of all eyewitnesses.
C)It could lead to a "battle of experts."
D)For courtroom testimony, expert witnesses require a medical degree, and psychologists do not have this degree.
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51
Which of the following has been shown to play a role in the nonsuggestive questioning of child witnesses?

A)Suggestive questions
B)Social influence
C)Selective reinforcement of answers
D)Open-ended questions
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52
Goodman and her colleagues (1998)found that the use of one-way closed-circuit television to present the testimony of a child had which of the following effects?

A)The children were viewed as more believable than children who testified in open court.
B)It generally resulted in more accurate testimony.
C)It generally resulted in less accurate testimony.
D)Both A and B
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53
Alexander et al. (2005)contacted adolescents and young adults who had been involved in a study years earlier that was conducted to assess the effects of criminal prosecutions on child abuse victims. These researchers asked respondents to indicate which events had previously happened to them and which event was the most traumatic. What did these researchers find?

A)Respondents who designated child sexual abuse as their most traumatic experience were not very accurate in reporting the details of their experiences.
B)Respondents who designated child sexual abuse as their most traumatic experience were very accurate in reporting the details of their experiences.
C)Surprisingly, most respondents did not report that child sexual abuse happened to them.
D)Although some respondents did report that they had experienced child sexual abuse, they often downplayed the seriousness of the event.
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54
Some children have experienced multiple incidents of sexual abuse. What tends to happen to a child's recall of repeated events?

A)Although repetition enhances memory for aspects of the event that are held constant, it impairs the ability to recall details that vary with each recurrence.
B)Repetition enhances memory for both the aspects of the event that are held constant and the ones that vary with each recurrence.
C)Repetition impairs memory for both the aspects of the event that are held constant and those that vary.
D)Repetition impairs memory for aspects of the event that are held constant, although source memory tends to improve.
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55
Children over the age of six can make reasonably reliable identifications from lineups as long as

A)the child has an above average IQ.
B)the perpetrator is in the lineup and is in contact with the perpetrator.
C)the child has photographic memory.
D)Both B and C
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56
Specific questioning of children is problematic because

A)it requires children to relive the moments.
B)it is suggestive and often leading.
C)increases the risk of obtaining inaccurate information along with accurate information
D)All of these are correct.
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57
Child witnesses are generally viewed as ______ credible than adult witnesses; child victims in a sexual abuse case are viewed as ______ credible than adults.

A)less; more
B)more; less
C)less; less
D)more; more
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58
Which of the following was found by Brewer and Burke (2002)to have a strong impact on jurors' verdict decisions?

A)The witness' level of anxiety
B)The witness' level of confidence
C)Whether the witness was a victim or an observer (observer is better)
D)Whether the witness was hypnotized
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59
In Maryland v. Craig (1990), the court upheld a Maryland law permitting

A)hearsay testimony from a child witness.
B)placement of a one-way screen in front of the accused.
C)use of a one-way closed-circuit television to present a child's testimony.
D)use of the cognitive interview when questioning children.
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60
Loftus (1974)gave subjects a description of an armed robbery. Eighteen percent presented with only circumstantial evidence convicted the defendant. When an eyewitness' identification was provided in addition to the circumstantial evidence, what percentage convicted the defendant?

A)18% of the jurors convicted him
B)25% of the jurors convicted him
C)42% of the jurors convicted him
D)72% of the jurors convicted him
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61
When witnesses from an event were brought in for questioning four weeks after the incident occurred, it was found that much of their memory had faded as a consequence of ______.

A)retention interval
B)post-event information
C)repression
D)confirmation bias
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62
Scientists believe that there are at least two kinds of recovered memories of CSA: those that are gradually recovered in the context of suggestive therapy and the other being

A)using hypnosis to make them recollect the past.
B)as an eyewitness identify the perpetrator from the lineup.
C)memories recovered spontaneously.
D)All of these are correct.
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63
Angie was a witness to a crime event. During witness identification a week later, neither she nor the lineup administrator was aware of the suspect's identity. This is a case of ______.

A)retention interval
B)archival analysis
C)double-blind testing
D)post-event information
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64
Emotionally-motivated forgetting that is hypothesized to result from traumatic experiences is called

A)repression.
B)natural forgetting.
C)dissociation.
D)confabulation.
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65
A witness chooses a filler from a line up during witness identification, thus leading to a wrongful conviction. Which of the following will help prove the wrongful conviction and examine features of the cases that could have led to the mistaken verdict?

A)Experimental methodology
B)Ground truth
C)Archival analysis
D)Post-event information
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66
Loftus and Pickrell (1995)constructed a false story about being lost at the age of five while shopping. They had subjects read this story, and write about what they remembered about the event. What approximate percentage of subjects remembered this event that never happened?

A)10%
B)25%
C)50%
D)75%
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67
In Linda Williams' (1994)study, why did women not report sexual abuse experienced as a child?

A)They might have repressed it or were too young to be aware of the abuse or may not be ready to share the information.
B)They were so young when it happened; they were terrified to report
C)They were unwilling to share this information as the perpetrator was a family member.
D)None of these are correct.
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68
Psychologists as an experiment asked the participants to imagine events that never occurred by doctoring family photographs. What is the effect of this fabrication of events?

A)Merely imagining or viewing a photo associated with a fabricated event does not have any effect on the memories.
B)Merely imagining or viewing a photo associated with a fabricated event can dramatically increase the rate of false memories.
C)Merely imagining associated with a fabricated event can differentiate the false memories from the actual events
D)None of these are correct.
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69
In 2009, the Texas legislature passed a compensation law rolling back the Supreme Court order that dictates that "states are not required to provide _________ to convicted offenders."

A)expert testimony
B)DNA testing
C)conjugal visits
D)bail
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70
Which of the following is true of children serving as witnesses?

A)Children ages five and older tend to make significantly erroneous identifications from lineups.
B)Children tend to select someone from the lineup when making an identification from a lineup in which the suspect is absent.
C)Children are generally more accurate than adults when making an identification from a lineup in which the suspect is absent.
D)Children ages five and older make mistakes in identification but are least liable to make a false-positive error.
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71
Twenty-eight year old Stephanie was in a study in which she was asked questions about the abuse she suffered when she was a very young child (this abuse was well documented by medical reports that Stephanie has not seen). Stephanie insists that she did not experience abuse. Which of the following could explain why Stephanie is not reporting this well-documented abuse?

A)She repressed memories of the abuse.
B)Stephanie was so young when it happened; she wasn't fully aware of the abuse.
C)Stephanie does remember the abuse; she doesn't want to divulge this information to the researcher.
D)All of these are correct.
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72
An unconscious process in which victims of abuse escape the full impact of an event by psychologically detaching themselves from it is called

A)repression.
B)natural forgetting.
C)dissociation.
D)confabulation.
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73
Which of the following has not been used by "memory focused" psychotherapists?

A)Diary writing
B)Sibling report
C)Sodium amytal ("truth serum")
D)Hypnosis
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74
Which of the following has been used in court in an attempt to lessen a child's trauma when testifying?

A)A one-way screen has been placed in front of the defendant
B)The child has testified on closed-circuit television
C)Permit a support person to sit with the child during testimony
D)All of these are correct.
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75
The physical appearance of an ethnic group of people causing changes in the witness identification is a case of ______.

A)other-race effect
B)physiognomic variability
C)source confusion
D)Absolute judgment
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76
Factors such as the lighting conditions at the time of the crime and whether the culprit was wearing a disguise are examples of ______ variables.

A)system
B)estimator
C)postdiction
D)physiognomic
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77
Which of the following best describes the condition of repression?

A)Suppressing painful or hurtful feeling within the unconscious mind
B)Failing to perceive all available stimuli in the presence of a weapon
C)Judging another person based on his childhood memories
D)Looking for, interpreting, and creating information that verifies an existing belief
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78
In the Case of Larry Fuller and the victim who "never wavered," Larry's photo was shown in two different photospreads during witness identification; this caused _________ in the mind of the victim while identifying the suspects.

A)post-event exposure
B)unconscious transference
C)other-race effect
D)ecphoric experience
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79
Which of the following situations is a good example of ecphoric experience?

A)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of having seen him previously at some place or event.
B)A witness identifies a suspect based on a subjective sense of recognition based on a good memory and a good likeness of the perpetrator in the lineup.
C)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of post-event information that conforms to his beliefs.
D)A witness identifies a suspect during a prolonged experience of transference in a therapeutic context.
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80
In the witness identification process, which best describes the other-race effect?

A)The witness wrongly identifies a suspect because of their inability to distinguish physical features of a person from another race.
B)A witness identifies a suspect based on a subjective sense of recognition based on a good memory and a good likeness of the perpetrator in the lineup.
C)A witness identifies a suspect as a result of post-event information that conforms to his beliefs.
D)A witness wrongly identifies a suspect during a prolonged experience of transference in a therapeutic context.
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