This document is a list of academic publications, primarily journal articles and book chapters, co-authored or edited by E.F. Loftus and various collaborators between 2009 and 2011. The publications focus on topics in psychology, particularly eyewitness memory, false memory, memory distortion, and forensic behavioral sciences. It serves as a bibliography or curriculum vitae entry.
This document is a list of publications (books) authored or co-authored by E.F. Loftus and also details her past affiliations and consultancies with various government agencies, organizations, and legal bodies from 1976 to 2008. The publications listed span from 1973 to 1994, focusing primarily on memory, eyewitness testimony, and psychology, with several international editions and translations noted.
This document is a professional profile for Stephen Gillers, the Elihu Root Professor of Law at New York University, dated January 2012. It outlines his professional contact information, areas of teaching, and a list of his major publications on legal ethics and professional responsibility. The document also notes his collaborations with co-authors Norman Dorsen, Roy Simon, and Andrew Perlman on several key legal texts.
This document is a professional biography and list of publications for Stephen Gillers, the Elihu Root Professor of Law at New York University, dated January 2012. It details his contact information, areas of teaching, prior courses taught, and a list of his major published books and anthologies, including information about his co-authors and publishers. The document appears to be part of a larger legal filing, as indicated by the case numbers in the header.
This document is page 329 from a book (likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, based on the ISBN in the footer), containing a 'Selected Bibliography' of books related to espionage, the CIA, the KGB, and Edward Snowden. It bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was collected as evidence during a congressional investigation. The 'Epstein' mentioned in the text is author Edward Jay Epstein, not the financier Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is page 313 of an academic text titled 'Morality Games,' produced as part of the House Oversight Committee's investigation (likely related to Epstein's funding of academic institutions like Harvard). The text discusses evolutionary theory, game theory, and sexual selection in relation to philosophy and morality. The page is primarily a bibliography listing academic references from authors such as Andreoni, Axelrod, and Batson, with citations ranging up to 2014.
This document is page 349 of a bibliography or reference section from an academic publication, likely a book or dissertation on cognitive science, neuroscience, or artificial intelligence. It lists citations alphabetically from 'Per81' to 'Sch02', covering topics such as reinforcement learning, memory, and neural networks. The document bears the stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013265', indicating it is part of a document production for a US House Oversight Committee investigation, though the specific connection to the investigation's subject (implied to be Epstein/Maxwell by the user prompt) is not visible in the text of this specific page.
This document is page 346 of a bibliography or glossary, likely from a scientific publication regarding Artificial Intelligence, Neuroscience, and Cognitive Science. It lists numerous academic citations for authors such as Ben Goertzel (who appears most frequently), Stuart Hameroff, Douglas Hofstadter, and Geoffrey Hinton, with dates ranging up to 2012. The document bears the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013262', indicating it is part of evidence collected during the House Oversight Committee's investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, reflecting his known financial interest in transhumanism and scientific research.
This document is a page from a bibliography or reading list (page 184) produced during House Oversight proceedings. It lists various books published between 1929 and 2002, covering topics such as mathematics, physics, religion, geometry, and neurobiology. The selection reflects eclectic intellectual interests, including titles on fractals, catastrophe theory, and mysticism.
This document is a page from the 'Brockman, Inc. Hotlist' prepared for the 2016 Frankfurt Book Fair. It lists the agency's representation at the fair (John Brockman, Katinka Matson, Russell Weinberger, Max Brockman) and details publishing rights and descriptions for two upcoming books: 'Balance of Power' by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, and 'The Janus Point' by Julian Barbour. The document carries a House Oversight stamp, indicating it is part of a government investigation, likely related to John Brockman's known ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is a legal disclaimer and regulatory disclosure page from a BofA Merrill Lynch financial research report dated June 30, 2016. It details the regulatory bodies and distribution entities governing the report's release across multiple global jurisdictions (UK, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, etc.) and includes standard warnings regarding investment risks, conflicts of interest, and copyright. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production to the US House Oversight Committee.
This document is page 392 of a book (possibly titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?') containing a bibliography/reference list for Chapters 15 and 16. It cites various academic and popular works related to physics, quantum mechanics, free will, and philosophy, including authors such as Stephen Hawking, Daniel Dennett, and Bertrand Russell. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016082' stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation, likely related to Jeffrey Epstein given the context of his scientific interests and connections to cited figures like Hawking and Lloyd.
This document is page 389 of a bibliography from a book, likely related to mathematics, logic, physics, music, or consciousness studies, given the titles listed (e.g., 'Gödel’s Theorem', 'Musicophilia', 'The Emperor’s New Mind'). It lists citations for works by prominent scientists and thinkers such as Roger Penrose, Douglas Hofstadter, Oliver Sacks, and Alan Turing. The page includes a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was produced as evidence for a congressional investigation, likely regarding Jeffrey Epstein's connections to the scientific community.
This document appears to be a scanned page from a self-help book (identifiable by content as Tim Ferriss's 'The 4-Hour Workweek') focusing on 'lifestyle design' and vocational choices. It includes a chapter header 'The Top 13 New Rich Mistakes' and footnotes citing psychological and linguistic texts. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013988' Bates stamp, indicating it was included in a document production for a House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document is page 118 of an academic text, stamped with a House Oversight Committee identifier (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021364). It discusses the psychological trade-offs of different theologies, specifically focusing on 'renewalist Christianity' and the cognitive effort required to maintain a relationship with a personal, invisible God. The page includes citations for various academic works on religion, anthropology, and psychology (hypnosis and dissociation), with the most recent citation dated 2010. There is no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his associates on this specific page.
This document is page 39 of a larger file labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021285', containing a list of academic endnotes (numbered 14-29). The citations reference works in sociobiology, evolutionary psychology, theology, and philosophy, including prominent authors such as E.O. Wilson, Richard Dawkins, John Cacioppo, Thomas Aquinas, Aristotle, and Kant. While no direct narrative text links to Jeffrey Epstein on this specific page, the content reflects the high-level academic and scientific interests often associated with Epstein's funding activities (particularly evolutionary biology).
This document is page 140 of a manuscript or book draft (evidenced by the 'TK' placeholder in footnote 205). The text discusses sociological and economic theories regarding connectivity, 'Locational Utility,' and the 'kinetic elite'—those who can move effortlessly through the world versus those who cannot. It references tech companies like Airbnb and Uber and cites thinkers like Adam Smith, Danny Hillis, and Peter Sloterdjik. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was collected as part of a congressional investigation.
This document is page 254 from a book or report, specifically the endnotes for a chapter titled "Did Snowden Act Alone?". Contrary to the prompt's premise, this document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein; its content is exclusively about Edward Snowden and other historical figures involved in espionage and whistleblowing. The page lists ten citations referencing interviews, news articles, and books, and includes a footer "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020406" which suggests it may be from a U.S. House Oversight Committee report.
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