Studying Confessions: A Confederate-Free, Cheating-Based Laboratory Research Paradigm

[1]  A. Macklin,et al.  Sexual Offending: The impact of the juxtaposition between social constructions and evidence-based approaches , 2022, Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice.

[2]  D. Cooke,et al.  The role of self-esteem and locus-of-control in determining confession outcomes , 2019, Personality and Individual Differences.

[3]  N. Goldstein,et al.  Self-Perceived Likelihood of False Confession: A Comparison of Justice-Involved Juveniles and Adults , 2018, Criminal Justice and Behavior.

[4]  J. M. Stewart,et al.  The prevalence of false confessions in experimental laboratory simulations: A meta-analysis. , 2018, Behavioral sciences & the law.

[5]  S. Kassin False confessions: How can psychology so basic be so counterintuitive? , 2017, The American psychologist.

[6]  I. Sigfusdottir,et al.  A national epidemiological study investigating risk factors for police interrogation and false confession among juveniles and young persons , 2015, Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.

[7]  S. Madon,et al.  Short-sighted confession decisions: the role of uncertain and delayed consequences. , 2015, Law and human behavior.

[8]  Stephen W. Michael,et al.  Accusatorial and information-gathering interrogation methods and their effects on true and false confessions: a meta-analytic review , 2014, Journal of Experimental Criminology.

[9]  S. Madon,et al.  Innocence and resisting confession during interrogation: effects on physiologic activity. , 2013, Law and human behavior.

[10]  I. Dror,et al.  The forensic confirmation bias: Problems, perspectives, and proposed solutions. , 2013 .

[11]  Dorit Alt,et al.  Goal Orientations and Tendency to Neutralize Academic Cheating: An Ecological Perspective , 2012 .

[12]  G. Wells,et al.  Temporal Discounting: The Differential Effect of Proximal and Distal Consequences on Confession Decisions , 2011, Law and human behavior.

[13]  S. Brandon,et al.  Interview and interrogation methods and their effects on true and false confessions , 2012 .

[14]  C. Meissner,et al.  Modeling the Influence of Investigator Bias on the Elicitation of True and False Confessions , 2011, Law and human behavior.

[15]  S. Kassin,et al.  Inside Interrogation: The Lie, The Bluff, and False Confessions , 2011, Law and human behavior.

[16]  Michel St-Yves,et al.  Confessing their Crime: Factors Influencing the Offender’s Decision to Confess to the Police , 2011 .

[17]  M. Schweitzer,et al.  In the Moment: The Effect of Mindfulness on Ethical Decision Making , 2010 .

[18]  N. Goldstein,et al.  Evaluating Capacity to Waive Miranda Rights , 2010 .

[19]  Michel St-Yves,et al.  Interactions Between Factors Related to the Decision of Sex Offenders to Confess During Police Interrogation: A Classification-Tree Approach , 2010, Sexual abuse : a journal of research and treatment.

[20]  A. Redlich,et al.  Self-Reported False Confessions and False Guilty Pleas among Offenders with Mental Illness , 2010, Law and human behavior.

[21]  Richard A Leo,et al.  Police-Induced Confessions: Risk Factors and Recommendations , 2010, Law and human behavior.

[22]  I. Sigfusdottir,et al.  Interrogation and false confessions among adolescents in seven European countries. What background and psychological variables best discriminate between false confessors and non-false confessors? , 2009 .

[23]  Robert A. Nash,et al.  Innocent But Proven Guilty: Eliciting Internalized False Confessions Using Doctored-Video Evidence , 2009 .

[24]  L. Henkel Jurors’ reactions to recanted confessions: Do the defendant's personal and dispositional characteristics play a role? , 2008 .

[25]  S. Kassin Confession Evidence , 2008 .

[26]  Richard A Leo,et al.  Police Interviewing and Interrogation: A Self-Report Survey of Police Practices and Beliefs , 2007, Law and human behavior.

[27]  Krista D. Forrest,et al.  Suspect personality, police interrogations, and false confessions: Maybe it is not just the situation , 2006 .

[28]  R. Horselenberg,et al.  False confessions in the lab: Do plausibility and consequences matter? , 2006 .

[29]  Saul M. Kassin,et al.  Investigating True and False Confessions Within a Novel Experimental Paradigm , 2005, Psychological science.

[30]  G. Gudjonsson,et al.  The Psychology of Confessions , 2004, Psychological science in the public interest : a journal of the American Psychological Society.

[31]  James S. Baxter,et al.  Interacting influences on interrogative suggestibility , 2004 .

[32]  G. Gudjonsson,et al.  Confessions and denials and the relationship with personality , 2004 .

[33]  L. Condie,et al.  Juvenile Offenders’ Miranda Rights Comprehension and Self-Reported Likelihood of Offering False Confessions , 2003, Assessment.

[34]  Saul M. Kassin,et al.  The Social Psychology of False Confessions: Compliance, Internalization, and Confabulation , 1996 .

[35]  Richard A. Leo,et al.  Inside the Interrogation Room , 1996 .

[36]  D. Boninger,et al.  The consideration of future consequences: Weighing immediate and distant outcomes of behavior. , 1994 .

[37]  G. Gudjonsson,et al.  How frequently do false confessions occur? an empirical study among prison inmates , 1994 .