Many criminal cases involve eyewitnesses or other fact witnesses who provide important testimony based on their memory for relevant events. While expert witnesses may be called in certain types of cases to discuss the reliability of memory decisions (eyewitness identifications, delayed outcries, etc), typically the dynamics of human memory are only described in the vaguest of terms.
This course provides a thorough introduction to the systems and processes of human memories, with an eye toward how they could be important in any case involving memory-based testimony.
This 60-minute session gives you a practical operating system for the mental side of legal work: how...
Most legal professionals are operating in survival mode whether they realize it or not. Not crisis-l...
This course examines the latest legal and compliance developments in the artificial intelligence (AI...
This one-hour CLE program examines the impact of implicit and systemic bias within the legal profess...
Adverse and derogatory information often has devastating effects on a contractor's ability to win co...
U.S. businesses providing online services that are used by minors face a rapidly evolving patchwork ...
Lawyers regularly communicate with clients who are angry, overwhelmed, frightened, unrealistic, or d...
During this course, you will learn about best practices and strategies for retaining intellectual pr...
This program is geared towards lawyers, experts, commercial property owners, and others in the envir...
Join us for Part 2 of a program tailored for attorneys seeking a better understanding of the ongoing...