Grants per year
Personal profile
Research Interests
Professor Rosenfeld’s research mainly concerns perfection of physiological, cognitive and behavioral means for detection of concealed information for field forensic use: such as in crimes, including prevention of terror acts and diagnosis of malingered head injury. He mostly relies on the P300 brain wave (event-related potential) as a sign of recognition. He also utilizes the autobiographical version of the Implicit Association Test, and also, occasionally, fMRI imaging. He developed in 2008 a novel (“Complex Trial”) protocol which has proven resistant to most countermeasures. Recently, he has also studied a newly developed countermeasure known as “voluntary memory suppression” which thus far does not defeat the Complex Trial Protocol.
Education/Academic qualification
Physiological Psychology, PhD, University of Iowa
… → 1971
Psychology, MA, University of Iowa
… → 1969
English and Comparative Literature, MA, Columbia University
… → 1961
Biology, Humanities, BA, Columbia University
… → 1959
Research interests
- Emotion
- Mechanisms of deception
- Psychophysiology
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Grants
- 3 Finished
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Neurocognitive Mechanism Underlying Unwanted Memory Control in a Concealed Memory Detection Context
American Psychological Association
12/1/13 → 6/30/14
Project: Research project
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Countermeasure Mechanisms and Ecological Validity of P300-Based Concealed Information Tests
9/1/12 → 8/31/13
Project: Research project
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Detecting Efforts to Defeat P300-Based Deception Tests
Defense Academy for Credibility Assessment
6/15/06 → 10/15/08
Project: Research project
Research Output
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Familiarity-related filler items enhance the RT CIT, but not the P300 CIT: Episodic vs. Semantic memory protocols
Olson, J. M., Rosenfeld, J. P. & Perrault, E., Dec 2020, In: International Journal of Psychophysiology. 158, p. 370-379 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Feedback does not influence the recognition-related P300 in a novel concealed information test while feedback-evoked P300 shows promising diagnostic accuracy
Sai, L., Li, H., Wang, C., Rosenfeld, J. P., Lin, X. & Fu, G., Nov 2020, In: International Journal of Psychophysiology. 157, p. 32-41 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Necessity of the target discrimination in the P300-based complex trial protocol test for concealed information
Davydova, E., Rosenfeld, J. P. & Labkovsky, E., May 1 2020, In: Psychophysiology. 57, 5, e13548.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
1 Scopus citations -
P300 in detecting concealed information and deception: A review
Rosenfeld, J. P., Jul 1 2020, In: Psychophysiology. 57, 7, e13362.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
9 Scopus citations -
The effect of retroactive memory interference on the P300-based Complex Trial Protocol (CTP)
Ward, A. C., Rosenfeld, J. P., Sitar, E. J. & Wasserman, J. D., Jan 2020, In: International Journal of Psychophysiology. 147, p. 213-223 11 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review