Curt Anthony Carlson
Affiliations: | 2002-2008 | Psychology | University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, United States |
2008- | Psychology | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Google:
"Curt Carlson"Mean distance: 17.63 (cluster 15) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorScott D. Gronlund | grad student | 2008 | University of Oklahoma | |
(Distinctiveness in an eyewitness identification paradigm: Comparing simultaneous and sequential lineups.) |
Children
Sign in to add traineeDawn R. Weatherford | grad student | 2008-2013 | Texas A&M University - Commerce (PsychTree) |
Jennifer Dias | grad student | 2017 | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Jane Whittington | grad student | 2018 | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Alex Wooten | grad student | 2020 | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Robert Lockamyeir | grad student | 2021 | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Eric Pleasant | grad student | 2021 | Texas A&M University - Commerce |
Alyssa R. Jones | grad student | 2015-2021 | Texas A&M University-Commerce (PsychTree) |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Carlson CA, Lockamyeir RF, Carlson MA, et al. (2025) Comparing the strength of the confidence-accuracy versus response time-accuracy relationship for eyewitness identification. Scientific Reports. 15: 11064 |
Carlson CA, Hemby JA, Wooten AR, et al. (2021) Testing encoding specificity and the diagnostic feature-detection theory of eyewitness identification, with implications for showups, lineups, and partially disguised perpetrators. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 6: 14 |
Weatherford DR, Meltzer MA, Carlson CA, et al. (2020) Never forget a face: Verbalization facilitates recollection as evidenced by flexible responding to contrasting recognition memory tests. Memory & Cognition |
Jones AR, Carlson CA, Lockamyeir RF, et al. (2020) “All I remember is the black eye.” A distinctive facial feature harms eyewitness identification Applied Cognitive Psychology |
Lockamyeir RF, Carlson CA, Jones AR, et al. (2020) The effect of viewing distance on empirical discriminability and the confidence–accuracy relationship for eyewitness identification Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 1047-1060 |
Wooten AR, Carlson CA, Lockamyeir RF, et al. (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 Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 590-604 |
Carlson CA, Jones AR, Whittington JE, et al. (2019) Lineup fairness: propitious heterogeneity and the diagnostic feature-detection hypothesis. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 4: 2 |
Whittington JE, Carlson CA, Carlson MA, et al. (2019) Asking an eyewitness to predict their later lineup performance could harm the confidence–accuracy relationship Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 119-131 |
Carlson CA, Jones AR, Goodsell CA, et al. (2019) A method for increasing empirical discriminability and eliminating top‐row preference in photo arrays Applied Cognitive Psychology. 33: 1091-1102 |
Carlson CA, Jones AR. (2017) An Abbreviated Festschrift: Expert Analysis of David Marr’s Early Works Psyccritiques. 62 |