Media
I relish opportunities to share our work with non-academic audiences. Below are links to a few examples.
I regularly blog for Psychology Today. My blog, called Reasonable Doubt, looks at the many ways in which psychology can help us understand, and prevent, miscarriages of criminal justice.
I love appearing on podcasts! Most recently, I discussed interrogations and false confessions on The Intercept's popular Murderville podcast (Season 2, Episode 4), and I talked about the psychological causes of forensic science errors on Lemonada Media's The Untold Story with Jay Ellis (Season 2, Episode 2).
I've previously written two short pieces for the Huffington Post, and my blog post on flawed evidence in the conviction of Melissa Lucio was recently republished in Texas Observer magazine.
My work and thoughts have also been featured in other news outlets, with a few examples below...
The New York Times (4/14/21; 'With George Floyd, a raging debate over bias in the science of death')
The Washington Post (2/20/21; 'Study finds cognitive bias in how medical examiners evaluate child deaths')
The Intercept (8/12/20; 'The junk science cops use to decide you're lying')
Quartz (2/3/16; 'The dangerous psychology of how false confessions rewrite witness' memories')
Chicago Magazine (12/23/14; 'No one knows for sure how much good policy body cams actually do')