All Stories

  1. Perceptions and Recognition of Female- Versus Male-Perpetrated Grooming Behaviors
  2. Detailing deception: The impact of detail type and amount on perceived statement veracity.
  3. The effects of confidence consistency and delay on perceptions of eyewitness credibility
  4. Recognising risk: perceptions of risk factors for female children and adolescents at risk of being sexually groomed
  5. They may not believe you remembered that nose: juror perceptions of eyewitness’ featural justifications
  6. Perceptions of Sexual Consent: The Role of Situational Factors and Participant Gender Among College Students
  7. The Problem No One is Talking About: Forensic Evaluators’ Lack of Familiarity with Dimensional Approaches to Personality and Psychopathology
  8. Yes, No, Maybe So: The Effects of Relationship Status on Perceptions of Inferred Consent
  9. Evaluating eyewitnesses: Translating expressions of pre‐ and post‐identification confidence
  10. Examining the role of speaker familiarity and statement practice on deception detection
  11. The alternative model for personality disorders and violence risk: Where are we now? Where are we going?
  12. Manhood honor as a predictor of laboratory-provoked aggression
  13. Knowledge of Adult Sexual Orientation Influences Perceptions of Adult-Child Interactions
  14. Sadistic masculinity: Masculine honor ideology mediates sadism and aggression
  15. Boys Round Here: The Relationship Between Masculine Honor Ideology, Aggressive Behavior, Race, and Regional Affiliation
  16. Narcissistic Personality Disorder and Deviant Behavior
  17. Beyond Nucleus Diagnostic Conceptualizations: Commentary on Narcissistic and Histrionic Personality Disorders
  18. Revisiting the link between childhood sexual abuse and adult sexual aggression
  19. Lifetime Acts of Violence Assessment (LAVA) predictors of laboratory aggression
  20. Interactive effects of baseline executive functioning and working memory depletion on alcohol use among heavy drinking young adults.
  21. “He seemed so normal”: Single tactic perpetrators of sexual violence are similar to non-violent men using the DSM-5's hybrid personality disorder model
  22. Gun Enthusiasm, Hypermasculinity, Manhood Honor, and Lifetime Aggression
  23. Differentiating corporal punishment from physical abuse in the prediction of lifetime aggression
  24. Self-reported Executive Functioning Competencies and Psychopharmacology Use History
  25. Hostile Masculinity
  26. Sibling Hostility and Externalized Symptoms of Psychological Distress
  27. Sexually violent women: The PID-5, everyday sadism, and adversarial sexual attitudes predict female sexual aggression and coercion against male victims
  28. Self-reported executive functioning competencies and lifetime aggression
  29. Psychometric properties of the Violent Experiences Questionnaire
  30. Lesbians and bisexual women and men have higher scores on the Personality Inventory for the DSM-5 (PID-5) than heterosexual counterparts
  31. Distrustful, Conventional, Entitled, and Dysregulated: PID-5 Personality Facets Predict Hostile Masculinity and Sexual Violence in Community Men
  32. Psychometric Properties of the Lifetime Assessment of Violent Acts
  33. When a “Brief” Is Too BriefWhen a “Brief” Is Too Brief
  34. PID-5 trait mediation of childhood maltreatment effects
  35. Mean girls: PID-5 personality traits and everyday sadism predict hostile femininity
  36. Friendship and Mental Health Functioning
  37. Anxious, hostile, and sadistic: Maternal attachment and everyday sadism predict hostile masculine beliefs and male sexual violence