Jamal K. Mansour
Queen's University
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Featured researches published by Jamal K. Mansour.
Legal and Criminological Psychology | 2009
R. C. L. Lindsay; Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Amy-May Leach; Michelle Bertrand
Sequential lineups were offered as an alternative to the traditional simultaneous lineup. Sequential lineups reduce incorrect lineup selections; however, the accompanying loss of correct identifications has resulted in controversy regarding adoption of the technique. We discuss the procedure and research relevant to (1) the pattern of results found using sequential versus simultaneous lineups; (2) reasons (theory) for differences in witness responses; (3) two methodological issues; and (4) implications for policy decisions regarding the adoption of sequential lineups.
Legal and Criminological Psychology | 2009
R. C. L. Lindsay; Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Amy-May Leach; Michelle Bertrand
Malpass, Tredoux, and McQuiston-Surrett (2009), hereinafter ‘MTM’, provide comments on the sequential lineup, research comparing sequential and simultaneous lineups, and the policy implications of this literature. We will comment on points of agreement and disagreement. First, we agree with the following: (1) Peer review, publication of results, and diversity of methods, procedures, and subject populations significantly contribute to the value of research as a basis both for psychological understanding and for recommended policy. (2) Absence of error, omission, and confounds make interpretation and application easier. These conclusions are not revolutionary but seem to occupy a great deal of MTM’s thinking. We disagree with many things that MTM have to say but have room here only to address a few.
Law and Human Behavior | 2017
Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Natalie Kalmet; Michelle Bertrand; R. C. L. Lindsay
Triers of fact sometimes consider lineup fairness when determining the suggestiveness of an identification procedure. Likewise, researchers often consider lineup fairness when comparing results across studies. Despite their importance, lineup fairness measures have received scant empirical attention and researchers inconsistently conduct and report mock-witness tasks and lineup fairness measures. We conducted a large-scale, online experiment (N = 1,010) to examine how lineup fairness measures varied with mock-witness task methodologies as well as to explore the validity and reliability of the measures. In comparison to descriptions compiled from multiple witnesses, when individual descriptions were presented in the mock-witness task, lineup fairness measures indicated a higher number of plausible lineup members but more bias toward the suspect. Target-absent lineups were consistently estimated to be fairer than target-present lineups—which is problematic because it suggests that lineups containing innocent suspects are less likely to be challenged in court than lineups containing guilty suspects. Correlations within lineup size measures and within some lineup bias measures indicated convergent validity and the correlations across the lineup size and lineup bias measures demonstrated discriminant validity. The reliability of lineup fairness measures across different descriptions was low and reliability across different sets of mock witnesses was moderate to high, depending on the measure. Researchers reporting lineup fairness measures should specify the type of description presented, the amount of detail in the description, and whether the mock witnesses viewed target-present and/or -absent lineups.
Behavior Research Methods | 2017
Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Roderick C. L. Lindsay
Eyewitness identification experiments typically involve a single trial: A participant views an event and subsequently makes a lineup decision. As compared to this single-trial paradigm, multiple-trial designs are more efficient, but significantly reduce ecological validity and may affect the strategies that participants use to make lineup decisions. We examined the effects of a number of forensically relevant variables (i.e., memory strength, type of disguise, degree of disguise, and lineup type) on eyewitness accuracy, choosing, and confidence across 12 target-present and 12 target-absent lineup trials (N = 349; 8,376 lineup decisions). The rates of correct rejections and choosing (across both target-present and target-absent lineups) did not vary across the 24 trials, as reflected by main effects or interactions with trial number. Trial number had a significant but trivial quadratic effect on correct identifications (OR = 0.99) and interacted significantly, but again trivially, with disguise type (OR = 1.00). Trial number did not significantly influence participants’ confidence in correct identifications, confidence in correct rejections, or confidence in target-absent selections. Thus, multiple-trial designs appear to have minimal effects on eyewitness accuracy, choosing, and confidence. Researchers should thus consider using multiple-trial designs for conducting eyewitness identification experiments.
Applied Cognitive Psychology | 2009
Jamal K. Mansour; R. C. L. Lindsay; Neil Brewer; Kevin G. Munhall
Legal and Criminological Psychology | 2015
Jennifer L. Beaudry; Roderick C. L. Lindsay; Amy-May Leach; Jamal K. Mansour; Michelle Bertrand; Natalie Kalmet
Law and Human Behavior | 2012
Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Michelle Bertrand; Natalie Kalmet; Elisabeth I. Melsom; Roderick C. L. Lindsay
Archive | 2011
Roderick C. L. Lindsay; Jamal K. Mansour; Michelle Bertrand; Natalie Kalmet; Elisabeth I. Melsom
Archive | 2010
Jamal K. Mansour; Heather D. Flowe
Encyclopedia of psychology and law, vol. 2 / Brian L. Cutler (ed.) | 2008
Jamal K. Mansour; Jennifer L. Beaudry; Michelle Bertrand; R. C. L. Lindsay