Semmler, C., & Brewer, N. (2023). The assessment of eyewitness memory for people and events. In D. Lorandos (Ed.), The Litigator’s Handbook of Forensic Medicine, Psychiatry and Psychology (Vol.2, pp.1-89). Thomson West.
Michael & Brewer
Michael, Z., & Brewer, N. (in press, 2024). Detecting criminal intent in social interactions: The influence of autism and Theory of Mind. Law and Human Behavior.
Empathic reactions
Brewer, N., Georgopoulos, M. A., Young, R. L., & Lucas, C. A. (2023). Autistic adults’ perspectives on appropriate empathic responses to others’ emotions. Autism Research, 16, 1573-1585.
RMET
Lim, A., Brewer, N., Aistrope, D., & Young, R. L. (2023). Response format changes the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test performance of autistic and non-autistic adults. Autism, 27, 2560-2565.
Cybercrime
Lim, A., Brewer, N., & Young, R. L. (2023). Revisiting the relationship between cybercrime, autistic traits, and autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 53, 1319-1330.
Dodginess detection
Brewer, N., Lucas, C. A., Lim, A., & Young, R. L. (2023). Detecting dodgy behavior: The role of autism, autistic traits, and theory of mind. Autism, 27, 1026-1035.
Georgopoulos et al – Aut Res 2022
Georgopoulos, M. A., Brewer, N., Lucas, C. A., & Young, R. L. (2022). Speed and accuracy of emotion recognition in autistic adults: The role of stimulus type, response format and emotion. Autism Research, 15, 1686-1697.
Brewer et al – Aut Res 2022
Brewer, N., Lucas, C. A., Georgopoulos, M. A., & Young, R. L. (2022). Facing up to others’ emotions: No evidence of autism-related deficits in metacognitive awareness of emotion recognition. Autism Research, 15, 1508-1521.
Lim et al – ACP 2022
Lim, A., Young, R. L., & Brewer, N. (2022) The effect of autistic behaviors on evaluations of deception and credibility in everyday social situations. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 36, 548-560.
Lim et al – AJP 2022
Lim, A., Young, R. L., & Brewer, N. (2022). Atypical behaviours associated with mental health conditions and disabilities negatively affect judgments of deception and credibility. Australian Journal of Psychology, 74(1), e2067486.