Brian H. Bornstein

Affiliations: 
Psychology The University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 
Area:
Social Psychology, General
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"Brian Bornstein"
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Cross-listing: PsychTree

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Publications

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Miller MK, McDermott CM, Edwards CP, et al. (2022) The Relationship between Workplace Incivility and Well-Being in Administrative Court Judges. The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
Miller MK, Pfeifer J, Bornstein BH, et al. (2021) Trust in the jury system: a comparison of Australian and U.S. samples. Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law. 28: 823-840
Wetmore SA, Neuschatz JS, Fessinger MB, et al. (2020) Do Judicial Instructions Aid in Distinguishing Between Reliable and Unreliable Jailhouse Informants? Criminal Justice and Behavior. 47: 582-600
Bornstein BH, Hamm JA, Dellapaolera KS, et al. (2020) JUST: a measure of jury system trustworthiness Psychology Crime & Law. 26: 797-822
West MP, Wood EF, Miller MK, et al. (2020) How mock jurors’ cognitive processing and defendants’ immigrant status and ethnicity relate to decisions in capital trials Journal of Experimental Criminology. 1-10
Hamm JA, D’Annunzio AM, Bornstein BH, et al. (2019) Do body-worn cameras reduce eyewitness cooperation with the police? An experimental inquiry Journal of Experimental Criminology. 15: 685-701
Miller MK, Reichert J, Bornstein BH, et al. (2018) Judicial stress: the roles of gender and social support. Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law : An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law. 25: 602-618
Mote PM, Neuschatz JS, Bornstein BH, et al. (2018) Secondary Confessions as Post-identification Feedback: How Jailhouse Informant Testimony Can Alter Eyewitnesses’ Identification Decisions Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology. 33: 375-384
PytlikZillig LM, Kimbrough CD, Shockley E, et al. (2017) A longitudinal and experimental study of the impact of knowledge on the bases of institutional trust. Plos One. 12: e0175387
Key KN, Neuschatz JS, Bornstein BH, et al. (2017) Beliefs about secondary confession evidence: a survey of laypeople and defense attorneys Psychology, Crime & Law. 24: 1-13
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