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Gary L. Wells
Gary L. Wells
Professor of Psychology, Iowa State university
Verified email at iastate.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Year
Recommendations for the Collection and Preservation of Eyewitness Identification Evidence
L Smalarz, G Wells
Applied Police Briefings 1, 5-8, 2024
2024
Cartridge-case examiners’ aversion to true rejections: A shocking problem with use of the “inconclusive” category.
AM Smith, GL Wells
Educational Publishing Foundation 13 (1), 156, 2024
2024
Telling us less than what they know: Expert inconclusive reports conceal exculpatory evidence in forensic cartridge-case comparisons.
AM Smith, GL Wells
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 2023
52023
Lay (mis) perceptions of suspect-identification accuracy from biased and unbiased lineups.
RC Ying, AM Smith, GL Wells
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 29 (3), 288, 2023
2023
In their own words: Verbalizations of real eyewitnesses during identification lineups.
NK Steblay, GL Wells
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 29 (3), 272, 2023
12023
Validity of forensic cartridge-case comparisons
M Guyll, S Madon, Y Yang, KA Burd, G Wells
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 120 (20), e2210428120, 2023
162023
Eyewitness confidence and decision time reflect identification accuracy in actual police lineups.
A Quigley-McBride, GL Wells
Law and Human Behavior 47 (2), 333, 2023
132023
Using reflector variables to determine whether the culprit is present in or absent from a police lineup
AM Smith, GL Wells
22023
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
AM Smith, JM Lampinen, GL Wells, L Smalarz, S Mackovichova
2023
Lives destroyed by distorted recollections of fluency, attention, view, and confidence: A sin of bias in eyewitness identification.
GL Wells, L Smalarz
Educational Publishing Foundation 11 (4), 461, 2022
2022
Fair lineups improve outside observers’ discriminability, not eyewitnesses’ discriminability: Evidence for differential filler-siphoning using empirical data and the WITNESS …
AM Smith, L Smalarz, GL Wells, JM Lampinen, S Mackovichova
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 11 (4), 534, 2022
92022
34 A Multi-Decade Journey between the Lab and the Real World
GL Wells
Pillars of Social Psychology: Stories and Retrospectives, 293, 2022
2022
Laymen Perceptions of Fair and Biased Lineups
RC Ying, A Smith, GL Wells
OSF, 2022
2022
Improving face identification of mask-wearing individuals
KD Manley, JCK Chan, GL Wells
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 7 (1), 27, 2022
92022
Test a witness’s memory of a suspect only once
JT Wixted, GL Wells, EF Loftus, BL Garrett
Psychological Science in the Public Interest 22 (1_suppl), 1S-18S, 2021
322021
Plea-bargaining law: The impact of innocence, trial penalty, and conviction probability on plea outcomes
MM Wilford, GL Wells, A Frazier
American Journal of Criminal Justice 46, 554-575, 2021
422021
Eyewitnesses’ free-report verbal confidence statements are diagnostic of accuracy.
L Smalarz, Y Yang, GL Wells
Law and human behavior 45 (2), 138, 2021
272021
Methodological considerations in eyewitness identification experiments
A Quigley-McBride, GL Wells
Methods, measures, and theories in eyewitness identification tasks, 85-112, 2021
232021
Award for Distinguished Contributions to Research in Public Policy: Gary L. Wells
GL Wells
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST 75 (9), 1313-1315, 2020
2020
Psychological science on eyewitness identification and its impact on police practices and policies.
GL Wells
American Psychologist 75 (9), 1316, 2020
402020
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