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Nadja Schreiber received her Ph.D. from
the Westfaelische Wilhelms-Universitaet Muenster, joining the FIU faculty in
2005. Her research interests are (child) witness interviewing and police
training. Specifically, she is interested in how investigative interviewing
techniques influence witnesses’ statements and how empirical findings can best
be transferred into “real-world” practices.
Representative Publications
Fisher, R. P. & Schreiber, N. (in press). Forensic psychiatry and
forensic psychology: Forensic interviewing. In J. Payne-James, R. Byard, T.
Corey, & C. Henderson (Eds.) Encyclopedia of Forensic and Legal Medicine.
Oxford: Elsevier Science.
Schreiber, N. & Parker, J.F. (2004). Inviting child witnesses to speculate: Effects of age and interaction on children’s recall. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 89, 31-52.
Schreiber, N., Wentura, D. & Bilsky, W. (2001). What else could he have done? – Creating false answers in child witnesses by "inviting speculation." Journal of Applied Psychology, 86, 525-532.
Schreiber, N. (2000). Interviewing techniques in sexual abuse cases – a comparison of a day-care abuse case with normal abuse cases. Swiss Journal of Psychology, 59, 196-206.
Last Updated August, 2005