Rachel Leigh Greenspan

University of Mississippi - Criminal Justice and Legal Studies

United States

SCHOLARLY PAPERS

4

DOWNLOADS

196

TOTAL CITATIONS

0

Scholarly Papers (4)

1.

Assessing Verbal Eyewitness Confidence Statements Using Natural Language Processing

U of Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 24-06, Psychological Science, Forthcoming
Number of pages: 33 Posted: 09 Feb 2024
Rachel Leigh Greenspan, Alex Lyman and Paul S. Heaton
University of Mississippi - Criminal Justice and Legal Studies, Brigham Young University and University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
Downloads 196 (314,461)

Abstract:

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eyewitness confidence, verbal confidence, natural language processing, eyewitness accuracy, eyewitness misidentifications, police officers, machine learning approaches, Transformer-based Large Language Mode

2.

What happens after debriefing? The effectiveness and benefits of postexperimental debriefing

Memory & Cognition, Vol. 50, no. 4, 2021, UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2022-27
Posted: 08 Sep 2022
Rachel Leigh Greenspan and Elizabeth F. Loftus
University of Mississippi - Criminal Justice and Legal Studies and University of California, Irvine - Department of Psychological Science

Abstract:

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Misinformation,Debriefing,Deception,Misinformation effect

3.

Eyewitness Confidence Malleability: Misinformation as Post-Identification Feedback

Law and Human Behavior, Vol.44, No.3, 2020, UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2021-23
Posted: 18 May 2021
Rachel Leigh Greenspan and Elizabeth F. Loftus
University of Mississippi - Criminal Justice and Legal Studies and University of California, Irvine - Department of Psychological Science

Abstract:

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post-identification feedback, eyewitness confidence, misinformation, choice blindness

4.

Pandemics and infodemics: Research on the effects of misinformation on memory

Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies, Vol. 3, No.1, 2021, UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper No. 2021-24
Posted: 18 May 2021
Rachel Leigh Greenspan and Elizabeth F. Loftus
University of Mississippi - Criminal Justice and Legal Studies and University of California, Irvine - Department of Psychological Science

Abstract:

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continued influence effect, COVID-19, infodemic, memory, misinformation, misinformation effect, misinformation prevention, pandemic, social media, warnings