Browse by UCL people
Group by: Type | Date
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Number of items: 15.
Article
Almazrouei, Mohammed A;
Morgan, Ruth M;
Dror, Itiel E;
(2022)
A method to induce stress in human subjects in online research environments.
Behavior Research Methods
10.3758/s13428-022-01915-3.
(In press).
|
Almazrouei, MA;
Dror, IE;
Morgan, RM;
(2020)
Organizational and Human Factors Affecting Forensic Decision-Making: Workplace Stress and Feedback.
Journal of Forensic Sciences
10.1111/1556-4029.14542.
(In press).
|
Almazrouei, MA;
Dror, IE;
Morgan, RM;
(2019)
The forensic disclosure model: What should be disclosed to, and by, forensic experts?
International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice
, 59
, Article 100330. 10.1016/j.ijlcj.2019.05.003.
|
Almazrouei, MA;
Morgan, RM;
Dror, IE;
(2021)
Stress and support in the workplace: The perspective of forensic examiners.
Forensic Science International: Mind and Law
, 2
, Article 100059. 10.1016/j.fsiml.2021.100059.
|
Dror, I;
(2009)
How can Francis Bacon help forensic science? The four idols of human biases.
Jurimetrics: The Journal of Law, Science, and Technology
, 50
(1)
93 - 110.
10.1016/j.jarmac.2013.01.001.
|
Dror, IE;
(2005)
Perception is far from perfection: The role of the brain and mind in constructing realities.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
, 28
(6)
763 - 763.
10.1017/S0140525X05270139.
|
Dror, IE;
Morgan, RM;
(2020)
A Futuristic Vision of Forensic Science.
Journal of Forensic Sciences
, 65
(1)
pp. 8-10.
10.1111/1556-4029.14240.
|
Dror, IE;
Morgan, RM;
Rando, C;
Nakhaeizadeh, S;
(2017)
Letter to the Editor — The Bias Snowball and the Bias Cascade Effects: Two Distinct Biases that May Impact Forensic Decision Making.
[Letter].
Journal of Forensic Sciences
, 62
(3)
pp. 832-833.
10.1111/1556-4029.13496.
|
Hamirani, M;
Dror, I;
Morgan, RM;
(2018)
Examining the Role of Science in the Courtroom: Admissibility and Reliability of Forensic Science in the Courtroom.
Albany Law Review
, 81
(3)
pp. 975-994.
|
Kukucka, J;
Dror, IE;
Yu, M;
Hall, L;
Morgan, RM;
(2020)
The impact of evidence lineups on fingerprint expert decisions.
Applied Cognitive Psychology
, 34
(5)
pp. 1143-1153.
10.1002/acp.3703.
|
Morgan, RM;
Nakhaeizadeh, S;
Rando, C;
Dror, IE;
(2018)
Authors' Response on research into contextual influences and forensic decision making.
[Letter].
Journal of Forensic Sciences
, 63
(5)
pp. 1598-1600.
10.1111/1556-4029.13836.
|
Nakhaeizadeh, S;
Morgan, R;
Dror, I;
(2015)
The Emergence of Cognitive Bias in Forensic Science and Criminal Investigations.
British Journal of American Legal Studies
, 4
(2)
, Article Fall 2015 - Special Issue.
|
Nakhaeizadeh, S;
Morgan, RM;
Rando, C;
Dror, IE;
(2018)
Cascading Bias of Initial Exposure to Information at the Crime Scene to the Subsequent Evaluation of Skeletal Remains.
Journal of Forensic Sciences
, 63
(2)
pp. 403-411.
10.1111/1556-4029.13569.
|
Book chapter
Dror, I;
(2011)
The Paradox of Human Expertise: Why Experts Can Get It Wrong.
In: Kapur, N and Pascual-Leone, A and Ramachandran, VS, (eds.)
The Paradoxical Brain.
(pp. 177-188).
Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK.
|
Dror, I;
Harnad, S;
(2008)
Offloading Cognition onto Cognitive Technology.
In:
Cognition Distributed: How Cognitive Technology Extends Our Minds.
(pp. 1-23).
John Benjamins Publishing: Amsterdam.
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