2015 |
Vredeveldt, A., Tredoux, C. G., Kempen, K., Nortje, A. (2015). Eye remember what happened: Eye-closure improves recall of events but not face recognition. Applied Cognitive Psychology. |
2015 |
Vredeveldt, A., Tredoux, C. G., Nortje, A., Kempen, K., Puljević, C., & Labuschagne, G.N. (2015). A field evaluation of the Eye-Closure Interview with witnesses of serious crimes. Law and Human Behavior. |
2014 |
Kempen, K., & Tredoux, C. G. (2014). A nose in a haystack: The challenge in selecting individual facial features from featural line-ups. University of Cape Town. (submitted for publication) |
2013 |
Vredeveldt, A., Tredoux, C. G., Kempen, K., Nortje, A., & Puljević, C. (2013). A list of recommendations for police interviewing – a technical report. (in progress) |
2012 |
Kempen, K., & Tredoux, C. G. (2012). The effect of viewing and constructing a composite on identification performance. South African Journal of Psychology, 42(3), pp. 434-444. |
2012 |
Sporer, S., Tredoux, C. G., Schoppl, J., Schafer, A., Nortje, A., & Kempen, K. (2012). Eyewitness identification and face composite construction. (submitted for publication) |
2011 |
Kempen, K. (2011). ’What big teeth you have“: Red Riding Hood and the holistic recognition failure. Masters dissertation, University of Cape Town. |
2011 |
Tredoux, C. G., Kempen, K., Nortje, A., Christ, B., Hoogenhout, N., & Kaiser, A. (2011). Do face composites contaminate memory? A meta-analysis. University of Cape Town. (in progress for publication) |
2009 |
Kempen, K. (2009). ’It‘s the thought that counts“: Face composite production can hamper recognition performance. Honours dissertation, University of Cape Town. |