Summarize the research on verbatim memory presented in this chapter…

Question Answered step-by-step Summarize the research on verbatim memory presented in this chapter… Summarize the research on verbatim memory presented in this chapter (pp. 99-104). What is verbatim memory and what have various studies shown about it? E.g., What is the ‘phonological loop’ identified by Alan Baddeley and what are the implications of this theory about verbatim memory with regard to witnesses’ testimony in a court of law?  What are other factors that affect recall besides time?  Etc.In determining whether a suspect has given consent to a search or waiving the Right to Counsel, what is the standard that the Courts tend to use when the evidence is police testimony?  (e.g., Maldonado v. US)  Why is this problematic?  What practices could be implemented to collect verbatim reports of consent to search/seizure?What is hearsay, according to the Federal Rules of Evidence?  How does this rule apply to confessions?  How does the law justify exclusion of the admission of a confession by a party-opponent to the Rule of Hearsay?  How is the cross-examination of a witness’s testimony regarding an oral confession subject to unreliability?  How does it differ from an eyewitness identification?How does the legal system resist efforts to reconsider cases there is evidence related to the innocence of the prosecuted that would suggest a false conviction?  Why is it problematic for the system to rely on jailhouse confessions to other inmates?  Explain.In language crimes, e.g., a threat, a conspiracy, a solicitation, an agreement to accept a bribe, and a false statement in a perjury prosecution, does the government have to prove what words the defendant actually uttered?  To what standard is the government held? Law Social Science Criminal Justice LIN 250 Share QuestionEmailCopy link Comments (0)