| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Kodak and Ilford perfected a film for physics but kept the composition a trade secret. | N/A | View |
| N/A | N/A | Kodak and Ilford perfected a film to reveal interactions of elementary particles but kept the com... | Global/Historical Context | View |
| N/A | N/A | Kodak and Ilford perfected a film for revealing elementary particles but kept the composition a t... | Global (Historical context) | View |
This document is a bibliography or publication list primarily featuring works by E.F. Loftus and co-authors from 2008 and 2009. The publications focus on psychological research topics such as false memories, repressed memories, eyewitness testimony, and cognitive psychology, often within the context of legal or social implications. The entries detail authors, titles, journals/books, publication years, and page numbers.
This document is a bibliography or publication list focusing on the work of E.F. Loftus and her collaborators between 1982 and 1984. It details numerous academic articles, book chapters, and encyclopedia entries primarily concerning memory, eyewitness testimony, jury instructions, and psychological aspects of legal processes. The list provides titles, co-authors, publication venues, and page numbers for each entry.
This text critiques the reliance on "mechanical objectivity" and algorithms in legal and social domains, drawing parallels to the history of science. It warns against the dangers of proprietary "black box" algorithms in criminal justice, citing issues with trade secrets impeding fair defense and the potential for algorithmic bias to serve as a proxy for race.
This document appears to be a page from a scientific bibliography or reference list containing citations from 1926 to 1998. The topics cover chaos theory, physiology (hormones, blood pressure), and psychology (mental control). The document bears a House Oversight Committee stamp (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013792), suggesting it was part of a document production related to the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, likely reflecting his interest in or funding of scientific research.
This document is page 29 of a bibliography or reference list, marked with a House Oversight Committee production stamp. It lists scientific citations (numbered 23-36) focusing on psychology, neuroscience, and sociology, specifically covering topics such as loneliness, social isolation, anthropomorphism, and the neural basis of social cooperation and rejection. The latest citation date is 2008, suggesting the document was compiled in or after that year.
This document is page 163 of a House Oversight production (Bates HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016383). It contains the text of an academic or philosophical essay discussing the dangers of 'mechanical objectivity' and the use of algorithms ('algorists') in criminal justice sentencing. The author argues against relying on 'black box' algorithms that hide trade secrets, citing Rebecca Wexler's 2018 work on intellectual property in the criminal justice system and drawing parallels to historical issues in physics with Kodak and Ilford film.
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