The Psychology of Confessions
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] H. Pétursson,et al. THE RELATIONSHIP OF ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOMS TO SUGGESTIBILITY AND COMPLIANCE , 2004 .
[2] Shelley E. Taylor,et al. Accelerated Course of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in Gay Men Who Conceal Their Homosexual Identity , 1996, Psychosomatic medicine.
[3] C. A. Morgan,et al. Accuracy of eyewitness memory for persons encountered during exposure to highly intense stress. , 2004, International journal of law and psychiatry.
[4] M. Bruck,et al. Jeopardy in the Courtroom: A Scientific Analysis of Children's Testimony , 1995 .
[5] Graham Davies. The Detection of Deception in Forensic Contexts: Coping with suggestion and deception in children's accounts , 2004 .
[6] Stephen Porter,et al. Truth, Lies, and Videotape: An Investigation of the Ability of Federal Parole Officers to Detect Deception , 2000, Law and human behavior.
[7] M. Lerner,et al. The Belief in a Just World , 1980 .
[8] Dale T. Miller,et al. Pluralistic ignorance: When similarity is interpreted as dissimilarity. , 1987 .
[9] G. Lassiter,et al. The Potential for Bias in Videotaped Confessions1 , 1992 .
[10] Saul M. Ka,et al. Communicating Promises and Threats by Pragmatic Implication , 1991 .
[11] R. Koestner,et al. Learning to detect deception. , 1984 .
[12] R. Rosenthal,et al. Pygmalion in the Classroom: Teacher Expectation and Pupils' Intellectual Development , 1968 .
[13] R. Ofshe,et al. The Consequences of False Confessions: Deprivations of Liberty and Miscarriages of Justice in the Age of Psychological Interrogation , 1998 .
[14] D. Bem,et al. Inducing belief in false confessions. , 1966, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[15] B. Depaulo,et al. Spotting Lies: Can Humans Learn to Do Better? , 1994 .
[16] G. Shepherd,et al. Words without Meaning: The Constitution, Confessions, and Mentally Retarded Suspects , 2002 .
[17] Christina T. Fong,et al. “I'm Innocent!”: Effects of Training on Judgments of Truth and Deception in the Interrogation Room , 1999 .
[18] H. Creighton. On the witness stand. , 1957, The American journal of nursing.
[19] Trisha Meili. I Am the Central Park Jogger: A Story of Hope and Possibility , 2003 .
[20] R. S. Morris. Convicting the Innocent , 1947 .
[21] N. Goldstein,et al. A review and update on the practice of evaluating Miranda comprehension. , 2001, Behavioral sciences & the law.
[22] G. Gudjonsson,et al. THE ROLE OF PERSONALITY IN RELATION TO CONFESSIONS AND DENIALS , 2004 .
[23] G. Gudjonsson. The Psychology of Interrogations and Confessions: A Handbook , 2003 .
[24] Stephen W. Jones. The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , 1985 .
[25] Richard A. Leo,et al. Inside the Interrogation Room , 1996 .
[26] Kevin Allan,et al. Memory conformity: Can eyewitnesses influence each other's memories for an event? , 2003 .
[27] S. Fulero,et al. Competence to confess: measuring understanding and suggestibility of defendants with mental retardation. , 1999, Mental retardation.
[28] S. Kassin. False Memories Turned Against the Self , 1997 .
[29] David B. Buller,et al. Interpersonal deception: II. The inferiority of conversational participants as deception detectors. , 1991 .
[30] M. Garry,et al. True Photographs and False Memories , 2004, Psychological science.
[31] Dariusz Dolinski,et al. Dialogue Involvement as a Social Influence Technique , 2001 .
[32] L. Condie,et al. Juvenile Offenders’ Miranda Rights Comprehension and Self-Reported Likelihood of Offering False Confessions , 2003, Assessment.
[33] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Confessions and denials and the relationship with personality , 2004 .
[34] William C. Thompson,et al. The Daubert/Kumho Implications of Observer Effects in Forensic Science: Hidden Problems of Expectation and Suggestion , 2002 .
[35] Steven A. Drizin,et al. Let the Cameras Roll: Mandatory Videotaping of Interrogations Is the Solution to Illinois' Problem of False Confessions , 2001 .
[36] Edgar H. Schein,et al. Coercive Persuasion : A Socio-psychological Analysis of the "Brainwashing" of American Civilian Prisoners by the Chinese Communists , 1971 .
[37] J. Pennebaker,et al. Lying Words: Predicting Deception from Linguistic Styles , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.
[38] L. Wrightsman,et al. Coerced Confessions, Judicial Instruction, and Mock Juror Verdicts' , 1981 .
[39] H. Weihofen,et al. Why Men Confess , 1971 .
[40] H. Edger,et al. Coercive Persuasion: A Socio-Psychological Analysis of the “Brainwashing” of American Civilian Prisoners by the Chinese Communists , 1963 .
[41] David L. Faigman. Science in the law : forensic science issues , 2002 .
[42] S. Kassin,et al. On the psychology of confessions: does innocence put innocents at risk? , 2005, The American psychologist.
[43] Concha Antón,et al. Generalized Communicative Suspicion (GCS) Among Police Officers: Accounting for the Investigator Bias Effect1 , 2005 .
[44] S. Fulero,et al. Assessing competency to waiveMiranda rights in defendants with mental retardation , 1995 .
[45] David Simon,et al. Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets , 1991 .
[46] L. Wrightsman,et al. Prior Confessions and Mock Juror Verdicts , 1980 .
[47] T. Grisso,et al. Juveniles' Competence to Stand Trial: A Comparison of Adolescents' and Adults' Capacities as Trial Defendants , 2003, Law and human behavior.
[48] Maria Hartwig,et al. Interrogating to detect deception and truth : effects of strategic use of evidence , 2005 .
[49] Y. Kamisar,et al. On the 'Fruits' of Miranda Violations, Coerced Confessions, and Compelled Testimony , 1995 .
[50] M. Blagrove. Effects of length of sleep deprivation on interrogative suggestibility. , 1996 .
[51] Saul M. Kassin,et al. “I’d Know a False Confession if I Saw One”: A Comparative Study of College Students and Police Investigators , 2005, Law and human behavior.
[52] G. Gudjonsson,et al. False confessions: The relative importance of psychological, criminological and substance abuse variables , 2001 .
[53] Steven A. Drizin,et al. Heeding the Lessons of History: The Need for Mandatory Recording of Police Interrogations to Accurately Assess the Reliability and Voluntariness of Confessions , 2004 .
[54] P. Boyer. The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England. By Carol F. Karlsen. (New York: Norton, 1987. xix + 360 pp. $22.95.) , 1988 .
[55] J. Wigmore,et al. Convicting the Innocent: Errors of Criminal Justice , 1932 .
[56] Linda A. Henkel,et al. (www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI: 10.1002/acp.1026 Memory Distortions in Coerced False Confessions: A Source Monitoring Framework Analysis , 2022 .
[57] G. Gudjonsson,et al. How frequently do false confessions occur? an empirical study among prison inmates , 1994 .
[58] Paul Ekman,et al. The wizards of deception detection. , 2004 .
[59] G. Gudjonsson. Suggestibility and Compliance among Alleged False Confessors and Resisters in Criminal Trials , 1991, Medicine, science, and the law.
[60] R. Leo. The Impact of Miranda Revisited , 1996 .
[61] Maria Hartwig,et al. Police Officers’ Lie Detection Accuracy: Interrogating Freely Versus Observing Video , 2004 .
[62] Julian Baggini,et al. SOCIAL animal. , 1953, Lancet.
[63] Ray Bull,et al. Psychology and Law: Truthfulness, Accuracy and Credibility , 2000 .
[64] G. Gudjonsson. Compliance in an interrogative situation: A new scale , 1989 .
[65] S. Fulero,et al. Mental Retardation, Competency to Waive Miranda Rights, and False Confessions , 2004 .
[66] P. Ekman,et al. Who can catch a liar? , 1991, The American psychologist.
[67] R. Lindsay,et al. “Intuitive” Lie Detection of Children’s Deception by Law Enforcement Officials and University Students , 2004, Law and human behavior.
[68] Steven A. Drizin,et al. Tales from the Juvenile Confession Front , 2004 .
[69] Fred E. Inbau,et al. Criminal Interrogation and Confessions , 1967 .
[70] V B CLINE,et al. INTERPERSONAL PERCEPTION. , 1964, Progress in experimental personality research.
[71] L. Wrightsman,et al. Confessions in the courtroom , 1993 .
[72] T. Grisso. Evaluating Competencies: Forensic Assessments and Instruments , 1986 .
[73] J. Darley,et al. Expectancy confirmation processes arising in the social interaction sequence. , 1980 .
[74] S. Kassin. The Detection of Deception in Forensic Contexts: True or false: ‘I'd know a false confession if I saw one’ , 2004 .
[75] James J. Lindsay,et al. Cues to deception. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.
[76] E. Hilgendorf,et al. A Decision-Making Model of Confessions , 1981 .
[77] Elizabeth F Loftus,et al. Make-believe memories. , 2003, The American psychologist.
[78] Ray Bull,et al. Can Training Enhance the Detection of Deception , 1989 .
[79] R. Malpass,et al. From the lab to the police station. A successful application of eyewitness research. , 2000, The American psychologist.
[80] D. M. Green,et al. Signal detection theory and psychophysics , 1966 .
[81] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Differences and similarities between violent offenders and sex offenders. , 2000, Child abuse & neglect.
[82] G. Gudjonsson,et al. The Gudjonsson Confession Questionnaire-Revised (GCQ-R) factor structure and its relationship with personality , 1999 .
[83] Ian M. Handley,et al. Videotaped confessions: Is guilt in the eye of the camera? , 2001 .
[84] R. Horselenberg,et al. Individual Differences and False Confessions: A Conceptual Replication of Kassin and Kiechel (1996) , 2003 .
[85] R. Leo. The Third Degree and the Origins of Psychological Interrogation in the United States , 2004 .
[86] P. Softley,et al. Police interrogation: An observational study in four police stations , 1980 .
[87] A. Kiev. Magic, Faith, and Healing: Studies in Primitive Psychiatry Today. , 1964 .
[88] J. Smyth,et al. Written emotional expression: effect sizes, outcome types, and moderating variables. , 1998, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.
[89] Welsh S. White. Miranda's Waning Protections: Police Interrogation Practices after Dickerson , 2001 .
[90] Ulf Holmberg,et al. Murderers' and sexual offenders' experiences of police interviews and their inclination to admit or deny crimes. , 2002, Behavioral sciences & the law.
[91] E. Elaad. Effects of feedback on the overestimated capacity to detect lies and the underestimated ability to tell lies , 2003 .
[92] Carmen Herrero,et al. Police officers' credibility judgments: Accuracy and estimated ability , 2004 .
[93] Giuliana Mazzoni,et al. Imagination Can Create False Autobiographical Memories , 2003, Psychological science.
[94] Bruce Schneier,et al. Guilty until proven innocent? , 2003, IEEE Security & Privacy Magazine.
[95] G. Gudjonsson. Persons at risk during interviews in police custody : the identification of vulnerabilities , 1993 .
[96] Aldert Vrij,et al. Why professionals fail to catch liars and how they can improve , 2004 .
[97] Videotaped interrogations and confessions: a simple change in camera perspective alters verdicts in simulated trials. , 2002 .
[98] G. Wells. Murder, Extramarital Affairs, and the Issue of Probative Value , 2003, Law and human behavior.
[99] E. Loftus,et al. Changing beliefs and memories through dream interpretation , 1999 .
[100] Stan Walters,et al. Principles of kinesic interview and interrogation , 1996 .
[101] G. Gudjonsson. The psychology of interrogations, confessions, and testimony , 1999 .
[102] S. Kassin. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFESSION EVIDENCE , 1997 .
[103] T. Grisso. Commentary: Reply to “A Critical Review of Published Competency-to-Confess Measures’‘ , 2004 .
[104] Gunnar Hrafn Birgisson. Differences of Personality, Defensiveness, and Compliance Between Admitting and Denying Male Sex Offenders , 1996 .
[105] Robert Parry,et al. Third degree. , 1997, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).
[106] R. Rogers,et al. Commentary: A Critical Review of Published Competency-to-Confess Measures , 2004, Law and human behavior.
[107] T. Grisso. Evaluating competencies: Forensic assessments and instruments, 2nd ed. , 2003 .
[108] Jeffrey L. Helms PsyD. Analysis of Miranda Reading Levels Across Jurisdictions: Implications for Evaluating Waiver Competency , 2003 .
[109] Paul Ekman,et al. A Few Can Catch a Liar , 1999 .
[110] G. Gudjonsson,et al. The efficacy of the appropriate adult safeguard during police interviewing , 2003 .
[111] Warren D. Holmes. Criminal Interrogation: A Modern Format for Interrogating Criminal Suspects Based on the Intellectual Approach , 2002 .
[112] L. Ross. The Intuitive Psychologist And His Shortcomings: Distortions in the Attribution Process1 , 1977 .
[113] Andrew L. Geers,et al. Bias and Accuracy in the Evaluation of Confession Evidence , 2004 .
[114] S. Kassin,et al. Coerced Confessions and the Jury: An Experimental Test of the “Harmless Error” Rule , 1997 .
[115] G. Lassiter,et al. Videotaped Confessions: The Impact of Camera Point of View on Judgments of Coercion1 , 1986 .
[116] B. Depaulo,et al. On-the-Job Experience and Skill at Detecting Deception1 , 1986 .
[117] Ray Bull,et al. Detecting true lies: police officers' ability to detect suspects' lies. , 2004, The Journal of applied psychology.
[118] A. Redlich. Law & psychiatry: mental illness, police interrogations, and the potential for false confession. , 2004, Psychiatric services.
[119] C. Meissner,et al. "You're Guilty, So Just Confess!" Cognitive and Behavioral Confirmation Biases in the Interrogation Room. , 2004 .
[120] A. Vrij,et al. Creating suspects in police interviews , 1999 .
[121] G. Gudjonsson. A new scale of interrogative suggestibility , 1984 .
[122] G. Goodman,et al. Taking Responsibility for an Act Not Committed: The Influence of Age and Suggestibility , 2003, Law and human behavior.
[123] S. Kassin,et al. Behavioral Confirmation in the Interrogation Room: On the Dangers of Presuming Guilt , 2003, Law and human behavior.
[124] R. Lifton. Home by ship: reaction patterns of American prisoners of war repatriated from North Korea. , 1954, The American journal of psychiatry.
[125] B. Depaulo,et al. Beliefs About Cues to Deception: Mindless Stereotypes or Untapped Wisdom? , 1999 .
[126] Determinants of acquiescence and naysaying of mentally retarded persons. , 1982 .
[127] H. Pétursson,et al. Custodial interrogation: Why do suspects confess and how does it relate to their crime, attitude and personality? , 1991 .
[128] P. Cassell,et al. Protecting the Innocent: A Response to the Bedau-Radelet Study , 1988 .
[129] G. Daniel Lassiter,et al. Attentional Determinants of Success at Detecting Deception and Truth , 1982 .
[130] Charles T. McCormick,et al. Handbook of the law of evidence , 1955 .
[131] R. Malpass,et al. EYEWITNESS IDENTIFICATION , 2005 .
[132] Roger W. Shuy,et al. The language of confession, interrogation and deception , 1997 .
[133] B. Latané. The psychology of social impact. , 1981 .
[134] S. Kassin. MORE ON THE PSYCHOLOGY OF FALSE CONFESSIONS , 1998 .
[135] E. Sagarin,et al. Guilty Until Proved Innocent: Wrongful Conviction and Public Policy , 1986 .
[136] G. Gudjonsson. Psychology brings justice: the science of forensic psychology. , 2003, Criminal behaviour and mental health : CBMH.
[137] P. Cassell. The Guilty and the 'Innocent': An Examination of Alleged Cases of Wrongful Conviction from False Confessions , 1999 .
[138] M. Zuckerman. Verbal and nonverbal communication of deception , 1981 .
[139] R. Bull,et al. False confessions and false memories: a model for understanding retractors' experiences , 2001 .
[140] R. Bull,et al. Attempts to Improve the Police Interviewing of Suspects , 2004 .
[141] M. Snyder. Motivational Foundations of Behavioral Confirmation , 1992 .
[142] M. D. Hill. Identifying the source of critical details in confessions , 2003 .
[143] Bryan Christie,et al. Creating False Memories , 1997 .
[144] John Walkley,et al. Police interrogation : a handbook for investigators , 1987 .
[145] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Police interviewing and psychological vulnerabilities: predicting the likelihood of a confession , 1998 .
[146] G. Gudjonsson,et al. The psychological characteristics of ‘false confessors’. A study among icelandic prison inmates and juvenile offenders , 1996 .
[147] J. Mccann. A conceptual framework for identifying various types of confessions , 1998 .
[148] R. Baumeister,et al. The need to belong: desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human motivation. , 1995, Psychological bulletin.
[149] Christopher B. Mueller,et al. Modern evidence : doctrine and practice , 1995 .
[150] R. Ofshe,et al. Making monsters , 1994 .
[151] S. Fulero. Expert Psychological Testimony on the Psychology of Interrogations and Confessions , 2004 .
[152] H. Bedau,et al. In Spite Of Innocence: Erroneous Convictions in Capital Cases , 1992 .
[153] Elliot Aronson,et al. The social animal, 9th ed. , 2004 .
[154] J. Horne,et al. The impact of sleep deprivation on decision making: a review. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.
[155] P. Cassell,et al. Police Interrogation in the 1990s: An Empirical Study of the Effects of Miranda , 1996 .
[156] T. P. Sullivan. Police Experiences with Recording Custodial Interrogations , 2004 .
[157] Saul M. Kassin,et al. The Social Psychology of False Confessions: Compliance, Internalization, and Confabulation , 1996 .
[158] J. Pennebaker,et al. The immunological effects of thought suppression. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[159] Saul M. Kassin,et al. “He's guilty!”: Investigator Bias in Judgments of Truth and Deception , 2002, Law and human behavior.
[160] K. McDermott,et al. Creating false memories: Remembering words not presented in lists. , 1995 .
[161] L. Wrightsman,et al. The Psychology of Evidence and Trial Procedure , 1985 .
[162] R. Barnum. Forensic Evaluation of Juveniles , 1999 .
[163] Aldert Vrij,et al. Who killed my relative? police officers' ability to detect real-life high-stake lies , 2001 .
[164] James W. Pennebaker,et al. Opening up : the healing power of expressing emotions , 1990 .
[165] David T. Lykken,et al. A Tremor in the Blood: Uses and Abuses of the Lie Detector , 1980 .
[166] Samuel R. Gross,et al. Exonerations in the United States, 1989 through 2003 , 2005 .
[167] Arne Trankell,et al. Reconstructing the past : the role of psychologists in criminal trials , 1982 .
[168] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Alcohol and drug intoxication during police interrogation and the reasons why suspects confess to the police. , 1994, Addiction.
[169] A. Vrij. Detecting Lies and Deceit: The Psychology of Lying and the Implications for Professional Practice , 2000 .
[170] Arthur A. Stukas,et al. Interpersonal processes: the interplay of cognitive, motivational, and behavioral activities in social interaction. , 1999, Annual review of psychology.
[171] M. McConville,et al. Confessions in Crown Court trials , 1980 .
[172] Westone,et al. Home Page , 2004, 2022 2nd International Conference on Intelligent Cybernetics Technology & Applications (ICICyTA).
[173] R. Nickerson. Confirmation Bias: A Ubiquitous Phenomenon in Many Guises , 1998 .
[174] T. Gilovich,et al. The illusion of transparency: biased assessments of others' ability to read one's emotional states. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[175] D. McNatt,et al. Ancient Pygmalion joins contemporary management: a meta-analysis of the result. , 2000, The Journal of applied psychology.
[176] M. Bruck,et al. The suggestibility of children's memory. , 1999, Annual review of psychology.
[177] T. Reik. The compulsion to confess : on the psychoanalysis of crime and punishment , 1959 .
[178] Saul M. Kassin,et al. Investigating True and False Confessions Within a Novel Experimental Paradigm , 2005, Psychological science.
[179] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Measuring influential police interviewing tactics: A factor analytic approach. , 1999 .
[180] Günter Köhnken,et al. Training police officers to detect deceptive eyewitness statements: Does it work? , 1987 .
[181] Stephen J. Schulhofer. *500 MIRANDA'S PRACTICAL EFFECT: SUBSTANTIAL BENEFITS AND VANISHINGLY SMALL SOCIAL COSTS , 2022 .
[182] G. Gudjonsson,et al. Child and adult witnesses with intellectual disability: The importance of suggestibility , 2003 .
[183] R. Cialdini. Influence: Science and Practice , 1984 .
[184] R. Leo. Miranda's Revenge: Police Interrogation as a Confidence Game , 1996 .
[185] S. Asch. Studies of independence and conformity: I. A minority of one against a unanimous majority. , 1956 .
[186] G. Lassiter. Interrogations, confessions, and entrapment. , 2004 .
[187] J. Baldwin. POLICE INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES Establishing Truth or Proof , 1993 .
[188] Eric Seemann,et al. Cognitive mechanisms underlying lying to questions: response time as a cue to deception , 2003 .
[189] E. Loftus,et al. Biography Becomes Autobiography: Distorting The Subjective Past , 2004, The American journal of psychology.
[190] H. Bedau,et al. Miscarriages Of Justice In Potentially Capital Cases , 1987 .
[191] A. Redlich,et al. The Police Interrogation of Children and Adolescents , 2004 .
[192] T. Chartrand,et al. The chameleon effect: the perception-behavior link and social interaction. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[193] S. Kassin,et al. Why People Waive Their Miranda Rights: The Power of Innocence , 2004, Law and human behavior.
[194] Nathan J. Gordon,et al. Effective Interviewing and Interrogation Techniques , 2001 .
[195] Matthew H. Scullin,et al. A suggestibility scale for children , 2001 .
[196] D. Gilbert,et al. The correspondence bias. , 1995, Psychological bulletin.
[197] J. Rivera. The Construction of False Memory Syndrome: The Experience of Retractors , 1997 .
[198] D. Davis,et al. Rethinking the Probative Value of Evidence: Base Rates, Intuitive Profiling, and the “Postdiction” of Behavior , 2002, Law and human behavior.
[199] M. Edwards. Evidence , 2004, The Lancet.
[200] W. Finlay,et al. Acquiescence in interviews with people who have mental retardation. , 2002, Mental retardation.
[201] Krista D. Forrest,et al. The Role of Preexisting Stress on False Confessions: An Empirical Study , 2002 .
[202] G. Stephenson,et al. THE EFFECTS OF CASE CHARACTERISTICS ON SUSPECT BEHAVIOUR DURING POLICE QUESTIONING , 1992 .
[203] G. Gudjonsson,et al. The Reasons Why Suspects Confess during Custodial Interrogation: Data for Northern Ireland , 1992, Medicine, science, and the law.
[204] Rachel Bowlby,et al. Studies in hysteria , 1895 .
[205] Aldert Vrij,et al. The impact of information and setting on detection of deception by police detectives , 1994 .
[206] L. Magid. Deceptive Police Interrogation Practices: How Far is Too Far? , 2001 .
[207] S. D. Clymer. Are Police Free to Disregard Miranda , 2002 .
[208] S. Kassin,et al. On the Power of Confession Evidence: An Experimental Test of the Fundamental Difference Hypothesis , 1997, Law and human behavior.
[209] B. Major,et al. Abortion as stigma: cognitive and emotional implications of concealment. , 1999, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
[210] G. Stephenson,et al. The incidence, antecedents and consequences of the use of the right to silence during police questioning , 1993 .
[211] S. Milgram. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View , 1975 .
[212] E. Loftus,et al. Creating bizarre false memories through imagination , 2002, Memory & cognition.
[213] Charles D. Weisselberg. In the Stationhouse after Dickerson , 2001 .
[214] Ray Bull,et al. Police officers' ability to detect deceit: The benefit of indirect deception detection measures , 2001 .
[215] W. Swann,et al. Hypothesis-Testing Processes in Social Interaction , 1978 .
[216] S. Freud. The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud , 1953 .
[217] T. Sullivan. Unequal Verdicts: The Central Park Jogger Trials , 1992 .
[218] G. Gudjonsson. Unreliable Confessions and Miscarriages of Justice in Britain , 2002 .
[219] G. Gudjonsson,et al. A Proven Case of False Confession: Psychological Aspects of the Coerced-Compliant Type , 1990, Medicine, science, and the law.
[220] P. Softley. Police interrogation: An observational study in four police stations , 1980 .