Stacy A. Wetmore
Affiliations: | Butler University, Indianapolis, IN, United States |
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Publications
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Seale-Carlisle TM, Wetmore SA, Flowe HD, et al. (2019) Designing police lineups to maximize memory performance. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied |
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 |
Wetmore SA, McAdoo RM, Gronlund SD, et al. (2017) The impact of fillers on lineup performance. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 2: 48 |
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 |
Wixted JT, Mickes L, Wetmore SA, et al. (2017) ROC Analysis in Theory and Practice Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. 6: 343-351 |
Key KN, Wetmore SA, Cash DK, et al. (2017) The Effect of Post-ID Feedback on Retrospective Self-Reports in Showups Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology. 32: 369-377 |
Mickes L, Seale-Carlisle TM, Wetmore SA, et al. (2017) ROCs in Eyewitness Identification: Instructions versus Confidence Ratings Applied Cognitive Psychology. 31: 467-477 |
Erickson WB, Lampinen JM, Wooten A, et al. (2016) When Snitches Corroborate: Effects of Post-identification Feedback from a Potentially Compromised Source Psychiatry, Psychology and Law. 23: 148-160 |
Key KN, Wetmore SA, Neuschatz JS, et al. (2016) Line-up Fairness Affects Postdictor Validity and ‘Don't Know’ Responses Applied Cognitive Psychology. 31: 59-68 |
Key KN, Cash DK, Neuschatz JS, et al. (2015) Age differences (or lack thereof) in discriminability for lineups and showups Psychology, Crime and Law. 21: 871-889 |