Alyssa R. Jones

Affiliations: 
Texas A&M University–Commerce 
Area:
Eyewitness memory, recognition memory, applied cognitive psychology
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Publications

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Carlson CA, Hemby JA, Wooten AR, et al. (2021) Testing encoding specificity and the diagnostic feature-detection theory of eyewitness identification, with implications for showups, lineups, and partially disguised perpetrators. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 6: 14
Jones AR, Carlson CA, Lockamyeir RF, et al. (2020) “All I remember is the black eye.” A distinctive facial feature harms eyewitness identification Applied Cognitive Psychology
Lockamyeir RF, Carlson CA, Jones AR, et al. (2020) The effect of viewing distance on empirical discriminability and the confidence–accuracy relationship for eyewitness identification Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 1047-1060
Wooten AR, Carlson CA, Lockamyeir RF, et al. (2020) The number of fillers may not matter as long as they all match the description: The effect of simultaneous lineup size on eyewitness identification Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 590-604
Carlson CA, Jones AR, Whittington JE, et al. (2019) Lineup fairness: propitious heterogeneity and the diagnostic feature-detection hypothesis. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications. 4: 2
Whittington JE, Carlson CA, Carlson MA, et al. (2019) Asking an eyewitness to predict their later lineup performance could harm the confidence–accuracy relationship Applied Cognitive Psychology. 34: 119-131
Carlson CA, Jones AR, Goodsell CA, et al. (2019) A method for increasing empirical discriminability and eliminating top‐row preference in photo arrays Applied Cognitive Psychology. 33: 1091-1102
Carlson CA, Jones AR. (2017) An Abbreviated Festschrift: Expert Analysis of David Marr’s Early Works Psyccritiques. 62
Carlson CA, Young DF, Weatherford DR, et al. (2016) The Influence of Perpetrator Exposure Time and Weapon Presence/Timing on Eyewitness Confidence and Accuracy Applied Cognitive Psychology
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