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Volume 11, Issue6November 1998

About the Observer

Published 6 times per year by the Association for Psychological Science, the Observer educates and informs on matters affecting the research, academic, and applied disciplines of psychology; promotes the scientific values of APS members; reports on issues of international interest to the psychological science community; and provides a vehicle for the dissemination on information about APS.

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  • The Memory Police

    Earlier this year, Chicago prosecutors dropped charges against two boys, ages 7 and 8, who had supposedly confessed to murdering an 11-year-old girl. Later, new evidence hinted that the killer was an adult, and that the confessions had been extracted by improper police interrogation. In a September issue of The New York Times, psychologists James Wood from the University of Texas-EI Paso and Sena Garvena from the University of Nebraska published an op-ed piece that presented psychological research findings bearing on why coercive interrogations can be so danger to us, especially when used on children. Psychiatrist Robert M. Galatzer-Levy used the same case as a vehicle for telling readers of The Chicago Tribune about research on the questioning of children.

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