The relationship between 3 witness factors and identification accuracy, as well as calibration and diagnosticity of confidence, was investigated. A total of 384 participants in an eyewitness experiment rated their facial recognition skill, general memory skill, and self-reported encoding strategy on a questionnaire presented after the photo-confrontation. Participants who rated themselves to be good face recognizers showed a slightly higher overall accuracy with a more diagnostic confidence-accuracy relation. Participants who reported that they relied on a holistic encoding strategy were associated with more accurate identifications and a stronger confidence-accuracy relation than those who reported an analytic encoding strategy. Degree of self-reported general memory skill was not diagnostic of identification performance.
The differential np scattering cross section has been measured at 96 MeV in the angular range c.m. ϭ74-180°at the neutron beam facility of the The Svedberg Laboratory in Uppsala. A subset of the data, covering 116-180°, has previously been published. The new, extended angular distribution has been normalized to the experimental total np cross section. Between 150°and 180°, the angular distribution is steeper than for most previous measurements and nucleon-nucleon potential predictions. At 180°, the difference amounts to about 10%, implying serious consequences because of the fundamental importance of this cross section. A value of the charged NN coupling constant consistent with our earlier result at 162 MeV has been extracted from the data.
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