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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/140773985

Eyewitness : unreliable evidence

Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person. This program examines cases of misidentification, the role that standard police procedures play, and what can be done to reduce occurrences of misidentification. Includes a staged shooting testing eyewitness memory.

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http://schema.org/alternateName

  • "Unreliable evidence"
  • "Unreliable evidence"@en
  • "Disclosure : Eyewitness, unreliable evidence"@en
  • "Eyewitness : unreliable evidence"@en
  • "Disclosure"@en

http://schema.org/description

  • "Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person. This program examines cases of misidentification, the role that standard police procedures play, and what can be done to reduce occurrences of misidentification. Includes a staged shooting testing eyewitness memory."
  • "Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person. This program examines cases of misidentification, the role that standard police procedures play, and what can be done to reduce occurrences of misidentification. Includes a staged shooting testing eyewitness memory."@en
  • ""It's one of the justice system's little secrets. Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person - but no one knows how often. Not convinced? Well then, you be the eyewitness. This program starts with a staged shooting - an experiment to test the weakness of eyewitness testimony conducted by Dr. Rod Lindsay who studies eyewitness memory. After the "shooting", students are asked to identify the shooter. Some remember nothing but the shock of the event; others offer detailed descriptions, but it's hard to believe they saw the same person. Lindsay states that best estimates put the number of innocent people convicted based on identification error in Canada at 40 to 300 individuals per year. What role does standard police procedures have in this alarming statistic? What can be done to reduce the chance of mis-identification?"--CBC Educational Sales Web page."
  • ""It's one of the justice system's little secrets. Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person - but no one knows how often. Not convinced? Well then, you be the eyewitness. This program starts with a staged shooting - an experiment to test the weakness of eyewitness testimony conducted by Dr. Rod Lindsay who studies eyewitness memory. After the "shooting", students are asked to identify the shooter. Some remember nothing but the shock of the event; others offer detailed descriptions, but it's hard to believe they saw the same person. Lindsay states that best estimates put the number of innocent people convicted based on identification error in Canada at 40 to 300 individuals per year. What role does standard police procedures have in this alarming statistic? What can be done to reduce the chance of mis-identification?"--CBC Educational Sales Web page."@en
  • "" ... This program starts with a staged shooting - an experiment to test the weakness of eyewitness testimony conducted by Dr. Rod Lindsay who studies eyewitness memory. After the "shooting", students are asked to identify the shooter. Some remember nothing but the shock of the event; others offer detailed descriptions, but it's hard to believe they saw the same person. Lindsay states that best estimates put the numbers of innocent people convicted based on identification error in Canada at 40 to 300 individuals per year. What role does standard police procedure have in this alarming statistic? What can be done to reduce the chance of mis-identification?" -- CBC , Education Sales website."@en
  • "This program shows how eyewitnesses don't always see the same things. Shows examples of how unreliable eyewitnesses can be."
  • "This program shows how eyewitnesses don't always see the same things. Shows examples of how unreliable eyewitnesses can be."
  • "It's one of the justice system's little secrets. Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person -- but no one knows how often. Not convinced? Well then, you be the eyewitness. This program starts with a staged shooting -- an experiment to test the weakness of eyewitness testimony conducted by Dr. Rod Lindsay who studies eyewitness memory. After the "shooting", students are asked to identify the shooter. Some remember nothing but the shock of the event; others offer detailed descriptions, but it's hard to believe they saw the same person. Lindsay states that best estimates put the number of innocent people convicted based on identification error in Canada at 40 to 300 individuals per year. What role does standard police procedures have in this alarming statistic? What can be done to reduce the chance of misidentification?"
  • "Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person. This program examines cases of misidentification, the role that standard police procedures play, and what can be done to reduce occurrences of misidentification. Also see a staged shooting testing eyewitness memory."@en
  • "It's one of the justice system's little secrets. Take a selective and sometimes deceptive memory, add flawed police procedures, and witnesses will identify the wrong person -- but no one knows how often. Not convinced? Well then, you be the eyewitness. This program starts with a staged shooting -- an experiment to test the weakness of eyewitness testimony conducted by Dr. Rod Lindsay who studies eyewitness memory. After the "shooting", students are asked to identify the shooter. Some remember nothing but the shock of the event; others offer detailed descriptions, but it's hard to believe they saw the same person. Lindsay states that best estimates put the number of innocent people convicted based on identification error in Canada at 40 to 300 individuals per year. What role does standard police procedures have in this alarming statistic? What can be done to reduce the chance of mis-identification?"@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Vidéo"
  • "Streaming video"@en
  • "Internet video"@en
  • "Ressources Internet"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Eyewitness : Unreliable Evidence"
  • "Eyewitness : unreliable evidence"@en
  • "Eyewitness unreliable evidence"
  • "Eyewitness unreliable evidence"@en
  • "Eyewitness, unreliable evidence"
  • "Eyewitness, unreliable evidence"@en