Part 1: Advances in Detecting Deception, Interrogation, and Crime Scene Investigation 1. Do Automated and Virtual Interrogation and Deception Detection Systems Work? 2. The Emergence of Police Real-Time Crime Centers 3. Facial Recognition Software for Lead Generation and Lineup Construction 4. Advances and Future Prospects in Evolving Face Matching Technologies for Crime Prevention and Investigation 5. Insanity Evaluations in the Age of Neuroimaging 6. A Decade of Evolution in the Forensic Investigative Field: A South African Overview Part 2: Collecting and Evaluating Eyewitness Evidence from Lay Witnesses, Police Body Cameras, and Super-recognizers 7. Who are you looking at? Using eye tracking to understand eyewitness decision making 8. Understanding Eyewitness Testimony with Virtual Reality 9. Facial Composite Technology and Eyewitness Identification 10. Technological Advances in the Administration of Lineups 11. Using Body-Worn Camera Footage to Remember Use-of-Force Incidents 12. “Super-recognisers” and the Legal System Part 3: Technology in the Courtroom: Social Media, Citizen Crime Sleuths, Virtual Court, and Child Witnesses 13. Digitally-Networked Sleuthing: Online Platforms, Netizen Detectives, and Bottom-up Investigations 14. The Virtual Court: Implications for Eyewitnesses and Beyond 15. The Impact of Technology on Jurors’ Decisions 16. The CSI Effect and its Impact on the Legal System, Policy, and Practice 17. Is Facial Recognition Software a Solution to the Negative Effects of Social Media on Eyewitness Testimony? 18. Developmental Psychology and Law in the Digital Era: Emerging Trends, Challenges, and Opportunities
Emily Pica is Associate Professor in the Department of Psychological Science and Counseling, Austin Peay State University, USA. Her current research interests involve investigating ways in which we can improve eyewitness identification accuracy as it is one of the leading causes of wrongful convictions. Additionally, she examines which factors may be more (or less) influential in jurors’ decision making.
David Ross, Ph.D., is a UC Foundation Professor of Psychology at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. He researches factors that impact the accuracy of eyewitness memory in children and adults. He has helped exonerate the wrongly imprisoned based on errors in eyewitness identification and works to prevent wrongful convictions by training law enforcement on collecting identification evidence according to research-based guidelines.
Joanna Pozzulo is Chancellor’s Professor in the Department of Psychology at Carleton University, Canada, Director of the Mental Health and Well-Being Research and Training Hub (MeWeRTH), and Director of the Laboratory for Child Forensic Psychology. The primary goal of her research is to understand how memory in the context of witnessing crime differs across the lifespan focusing on the young eyewitness.