PROGRAM OVERVIEW
All graduate students in Psychology and Law are expected to:
- Take the core courses:
- Research Methods
- Social Psychology
- Developmental Psychology
- Cognitive Psychology
- Biological Psychology
- Take 2 core statistics courses
- Your committee will likely recommend additional statistics courses
- Complete and defend a Master's thesis and Dissertation in some area of Psychology and Law
- Pass a qualifying exam, developed by the student in collaboration with your graduate committee
- Participate in the 1 credit Psychology/Law proseminar each semester
- Be active in the Psychology and Law Research Group
Psychology and Law Core Faculty:
Kayla Burd
Social cognitive processes in decision making
- Eyewitnesses
- Police Officers
- Jurors
Extra-legal biases on perception, memory, and reasoning
Police investigations and shooting decisions
Scott Freng
Social Psychology
- Social cognitive processes in juror decision making
- Investigating outcomes related to different forms of prejudice (e.g., sentencing disparities)

Sean McCrea
Social Psychology
- Social cognition
- Judgment and decision making
- Group identity
Ph.D.'s from our program. They are gone but not forgotten.
- Monica McCoy (Ph.D. 1997) Developmental Psychology, Dissertation "Jurors' reasoning skills and verdict decisions: The effect of jury deliberations." Currently a Professor and Chair of the Psychology Department at Converse College.
- Matt Dammeyer, (Ph.D. 1999) Clinical Psychology, Dissertation- "Self-reported levels of anxiety and depression among law students." Currently the Director of Behavioral Health at Central Peninsula General Hospital, Alaska
- Walt Peters, (Ph.D. 2000) Developmental Psychology, Dissertation- "Adult perceptions of child witnesses." Currently a Research Associate at Neilson in Australia.
- Kami London (Ph.D. 2001) Developmental Psychology, Dissertation "Investigative courtroom interviews of children: Examining the efficacy of Truth/Lie Discussions in increasing the veracity of children's reports." Currently an Associate Professor at the University of Toledo.
- Mindy Dahl (Ph.D. 2005) Developmental Psychology Dissertation- "Adolescent decisions in situations of uncertainty: The impact of risky choice framing and decision making competency." Currently a Health Science Policy Advisor at the National Institute of Mental Health.
- Connie Tang (Ph.D. 2005) Developmental Psychology- Dissertation "Young Children's Awareness of When New Learning Occurred." Currently an Associate Professor at Stockton College.
- Dana Binder (Ph.D. 2006) Social Psychology- Dissertation "The relationship between Need for Cognition, argument strength, and the persuasiveness of courtroom technology." Currently a Trial Consultant at Dispute Dynamics, Inc.
- Christine Shea Adams (Ph.D. 2007) Social Psychology- Dissertation "The Death Penalty Attitudes Scale: Can capital trial jurors be chosen more fairly?" Currently a Statistical Analyst at The Colorado Division of Criminal Justice.
- Jessica Hatz (Ph.D. 2007) Social Psychology - Dissertation "Do deceptive behaviors and lie detection abilities vary as a function of the method use for eliciting lies.'' Currently an Associate Professor at Austin Peay State, TN.
- Andre Kehn (Ph.D. 2010) Psychology and Law - Dissertation "The impact of social categorization on own-and other-race face processing." Currently an Associate Professor at the University of North Dakota.
- Jennifer Gray (Ph.D. 2012) Psychology and Law - Dissertation "The role of jurors' prior beliefs on the impact of expert testimony." Currently an Assistant Professor at Mt. Olive University.
- Stephannie Walker (Ph.D. 2013) Psychology and Law - Dissertation "Reinventing the mousetrap: Source misattribution among elderly as a result of imagination inflation and repeated questioning." Currently an Research Associate at Wake Medical School.
- Christopher Chai (Ph.D. 2014) Psychology and Law - Dissertation "The impact of stereotypical Asian crimes on juror decision-making: Punishing the model minority". Research Associate at the National Institute for Mental Health.
- Kimberly Schweitzer (Ph.D. 2016) Psychology and Law Dissertation- Does DNA evidence trump all other evidence? An examination of the effects of common homicide trial evidence and mock jurors’ verdicts. Currently an Assistant Professor in Criminal Justice at ÃÛÑ¿TV
- Victoria Estrada-Reynolds (Ph.D. 2017). I don't not like them: Positive and negative attitudes among racial minority and majority groups predicting support for immigration policy. Currently an Assistant Professor at Stockton College.







