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Jury Symposium on (Audio-)Visual Evidence

Colette R. Brunschwig

2010-06-09 09:30

On Friday, 11th June 2010, the International Centre for Comparative Criminological Research at the Open University, Milton Keynes, England, will hold a Jury Symposium on (Audio-)Visual Evidence. 

The following topics will be covered:

  • “Face Mapping” as Evidence in Court (Richard Neave);
  • “Surveillance footage as evidence in 1935 (Chris Williams);
  • Virtual Reality and 3D Animation in Forensic Visualisation (Minhua Eunice Ma);
  • How Real is Too Real? Avatars’ Influence on Judgment (Gerry Derksen);
  • CSI effect and visual evidence (Graham Pike);
  • Mind, your own business? fMRI imaging in the legal process (Burkhard Schafer);
  • Multisensory law, a new legal discipline, and how it’s related to (audio-)visual evidence (Colette R. Brunschwig);
  • Beyond the grave: Multimedia, victim impact statements and the role of multisensory jurisprudence (Burkhard Schafer);
  • Review of jury symposium held in March 2010: key themes and outcomes (Michael Bromby). 

For further information, I would like to refer you to the conference website (see http://www.open.ac.uk/icccr/events.shtml). I am also attaching the conference programme which contains the presentation abstracts.

Should anybody know about other passed or upcoming events relevant to multisensory law and its branches, such as visual law and audio-visual law, please do not hesitate to let the community on multisensory law at C. H. Beck publishers know.

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