Driven to failure: An empirical analysis of driver's license suspension in North Carolina WE Crozier, BL Garrett Duke LJ 69, 1585, 2019 | 58 | 2019 |
Believing is seeing: Biased viewing of body-worn camera footage KA Jones, WE Crozier, D Strange Journal of applied research in memory and cognition 6 (4), 460-474, 2017 | 57 | 2017 |
Memory errors in alibi generation: How an alibi can turn against us WE Crozier, D Strange, EF Loftus Behavioral Sciences & the Law 35 (1), 6-17, 2017 | 44 | 2017 |
Error rates, likelihood ratios, and jury evaluation of forensic evidence BL Garrett, WE Crozier, R Grady Journal of Forensic Sciences 65 (4), 1199-1209, 2020 | 38 | 2020 |
Objectivity is a myth for you but not for me or police: A bias blind spot for viewing and remembering criminal events. KA Jones, WE Crozier, D Strange Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 24 (2), 259, 2018 | 35 | 2018 |
Memory errors in police interviews: The bait question as a source of misinformation TJ Luke, WE Crozier, D Strange Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 6 (3), 260-273, 2017 | 33 | 2017 |
Correcting the misinformation effect WE Crozier, D Strange Applied Cognitive Psychology 33 (4), 585-595, 2019 | 29 | 2019 |
Mock jurors’ evaluation of firearm examiner testimony. BL Garrett, N Scurich, WE Crozier Law and human behavior 44 (5), 412, 2020 | 18 | 2020 |
Look there! The effect of perspective, attention, and instructions on how people understand recorded police encounters KA Jones, WE Crozier, D Strange Behavioral Sciences & the Law 37 (6), 711-731, 2019 | 17 | 2019 |
Juror appraisals of forensic evidence: Effects of blind proficiency and cross-examination WE Crozier, J Kukucka, BL Garrett Forensic Science International 315, 110433, 2020 | 15 | 2020 |
Undeliverable: Suspended driver's licenses and the problem of notice B Garrett, K Modjadidi, W Crozier IV UCLA Crim. Just. L. Rev. 4, 185, 2020 | 15 | 2020 |
Taking the bait: Interrogation questions about hypothetical evidence may inflate perceptions of guilt WE Crozier, TJ Luke, D Strange Psychology, crime & law 26 (9), 902-925, 2020 | 14 | 2020 |
Rethinking the ken through the lens of psychological science JM Chin, WE Crozier Osgoode Hall LJ 55, 625, 2018 | 13* | 2018 |
Virtual criminal courts D Ariturk, WE Crozier, BL Garrett U. Chi. L. Rev. Online, 57, 2020 | 11 | 2020 |
Contaminated confessions: How source and consistency of confession details influence memory and attributions F Alceste, WE Crozier, D Strange Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 8 (1), 78-91, 2019 | 11 | 2019 |
The transparency of jail data WE Crozier, BL Garrett, A Krishnamurthy Wake Forest L. Rev. 55, 821, 2020 | 10 | 2020 |
Right place, wrong time: The limitations of mental reinstatement of context on alibi-elicitation SA Cardenas, W Crozier, D Strange Psychology, crime & law 27 (3), 201-230, 2021 | 9 | 2021 |
Court case context and fluency-promoting photos inflate the credibility of forensic science M Sanson, WE Crozier, D Strange Zeitschrift für Psychologie, 2020 | 9 | 2020 |
Open prosecution BL Garrett, WE Crozier, K Dahaghi, EJ Gifford, C Grodensky, ... Stan. L. Rev. 75, 1365, 2023 | 8 | 2023 |
Court date reminders reduce court nonappearance: A meta‐analysis SA Zottola, WE Crozier, D Ariturk, SL Desmarais Criminology & Public Policy 22 (1), 97-123, 2023 | 7 | 2023 |