Dan Simon, a 2022-23 CASBS fellow and USC law professor, joins in conversation with Elizabeth Loftus, a 1978-79 CASBS fellow and Distinguished Professor at UC Irvine. Loftus is known in the public sphere through her decades-long study of memory – specifically, its malleability and fallibility – as well as her application of findings as an expert witness or consultant in hundreds of legal cases. Loftus's book "Eyewitness Testimony," completed at the Center, charted the course of her career that followed and serves as this episode's launching point.
ELIZABETH LOFTUS
UC Irvine faculty page
Wikipedia page
TED Talk (2013), "How reliable is your memory?"
Nobel Prize Summit (2023), "The misinformation effect"
The New Yorker (2021), "How Elizabeth Loftus Changed the Meaning of Memory"
DAN SIMON
USC Gould School of Law faculty page
CASBS bio
"In Doubt: The Psychology of the Criminal Justice Process" (Harvard Univ. Press, 2012)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences(CASBS)at Stanford University
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreach
Follow the CASBS webcast series, Social Science for a World in Crisis
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
Explore CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreach
Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel |
09/11/23 • 51 min
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