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Hayley Cullen
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Jury simulation studies: To exclude or not to exclude participants based on a lack of comprehension of the case?
HJ Cullen, LA Monds
Applied Cognitive Psychology 34 (5), 1224-1233, 2020
182020
Memory and credibility perceptions of alcohol and other drug intoxicated witnesses and victims of crime
LA Monds, HJ Cullen, L Kloft, C van Golde, AW Harrison, H Flowe
Psychology, Crime & Law 28 (8), 820-840, 2022
142022
Police perceptions of eyewitness impairment due to alcohol and other drug use: A cross-cultural comparison
LA Monds, HJ Cullen, L Kloft, N Sumampouw, C van Golde, AW Harrison, ...
Police Practice and Research 23 (1), 34-49, 2022
92022
Does experiencing inattentional blindness for crime influence eyewitness recall?
HJ Cullen, HM Paterson, C van Golde
Memory 30 (2), 206-216, 2022
72022
Mock juror perceptions of witness inattentional blindness
HJ Cullen, HM Paterson, C van Golde
Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 38 (2), 263-280, 2023
62023
Evidence-based policing in Australia: An examination of the appropriateness and transparency of lineup identification and investigative interviewing practices
HJ Cullen, L Adam, C van Golde
International Journal of Police Science & Management 23 (1), 85-98, 2021
52021
Crime obviousness and awareness: Everyday distractions may reduce awareness of ‘obvious’ crime
H Cullen, H Paterson, C van Golde
meeting of SARMAC (Society for Research in memory and cognition). Sydney …, 2017
52017
One statement at a time: How memory research can facilitate prosecution of domestic and family violence
C van Golde, N Dilevski, SL Deck, HJ Cullen, HM Paterson
Australia & New Zealand Journal of Evidence Based Policing 3, 12-17, 2018
42018
Stopping crime? The effect of crime re-enactments on eyewitness memory
HJ Cullen, HM Paterson, C van Golde
Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 28 (2), 286-309, 2021
32021
Juror perceptions of bystander and victim intoxication by different substances
N Dilevski, HJ Cullen, C van Golde, HD Flowe, HM Paterson, ...
Criminal Justice and Behavior, 00938548241227543, 2024
12024
‘Tell me what just happened’: the effect of immediate recall on adult memory for instances of a repeated event
N Dilevski, HJ Cullen, A Marsh, HM Paterson, C van Golde
Psychology, Crime & Law, 1-25, 2022
12022
The prejudices of expert evidence
JM Chin, HJ Cullen, B Clarke
Monash University Law Review 48 (2), 59-96, 2022
12022
Inattentional blindness in eyewitnesses to crime: Consequences for eyewitness safety, memory and credibility
H Cullen
12020
The impact of misinformation presented during jury deliberation on juror memory and decision-making
HJ Cullen, N Dilevski, FT Nitschke, G Ribeiro, S Brind, N Woolley
Frontiers in psychology 15, 1232228, 2024
2024
A survey of what legal populations believe and know about inattentional blindness and visual detection
HJ Cullen, HM Paterson, TS Dutton, C van Golde
Plos one 19 (1), e0296489, 2024
2024
Witnesses who Experience Inattentional Blindness are Only Less Accurate and Confident Under Cued Compared to Free Recall
H Cullen, Z Crittenden, E Tobin
PsyArXiv, 2023
2023
Does visual metacognition differ based on perspective?
H Cullen
PsyArXiv, 2023
2023
The risk of memory blindness when interviewing witnesses
H Cullen, C van Golde
Police Science: Australia & New Zealand Journal of Evidence Based Policing 6 …, 2021
2021
The effect of recalling the ‘time remembered best’on adults’ suggestibility for an instance of a repeated event versus a single event
N Dilevski, H Cullen, C van Golde
OSF, 2021
2021
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Articles 1–19