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The legal implications of facial recognition technology, human memory, and perception services

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Manage episode 517441188 series 2420032
Content provided by Lawyers Weekly and Momentum Media. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lawyers Weekly and Momentum Media or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this special episode of The Lawyers Weekly Show, produced in partnership with Unisearch Expert Opinion Services, we explore how forensic and cognitive psychology is being applied in the justice system, and how – together with facial recognition technology – such developments may have implications for legal proceedings.

Host Jerome Doraisamy speaks with Professor Richard Kemp, Forensic Psychologist and Unisearch Expert, UNSW, and Unisearch Expert Opinion Services business development manager Christopher Aaron Yong about Professor Kemp's research fields, why experts like him are in greater demand, the pertinence and necessity of such services in ensuring access to justice, the limitations of such scientific fields, and addressing gaps in legal proceedings.

Professor Kemp and Yong also delve into the types of proceedings that such services can be applied to, the place for facial recognition technology in such conversations, risks to be navigated, implications for legal practitioners on the ground, case studies and lessons from those proceedings, and also explore how to assess the reliability of one's memory.

To learn more about Unisearch Expert Opinion Services, click here.

If you like this episode, show your support by rating us or leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (The Lawyers Weekly Show) and by following Lawyers Weekly on social media: Facebook, X and LinkedIn.

If you have any questions about what you heard today, any topics of interest you have in mind, or if you'd like to lend your voice to the show, email [email protected]

  continue reading

1195 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 517441188 series 2420032
Content provided by Lawyers Weekly and Momentum Media. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Lawyers Weekly and Momentum Media or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this special episode of The Lawyers Weekly Show, produced in partnership with Unisearch Expert Opinion Services, we explore how forensic and cognitive psychology is being applied in the justice system, and how – together with facial recognition technology – such developments may have implications for legal proceedings.

Host Jerome Doraisamy speaks with Professor Richard Kemp, Forensic Psychologist and Unisearch Expert, UNSW, and Unisearch Expert Opinion Services business development manager Christopher Aaron Yong about Professor Kemp's research fields, why experts like him are in greater demand, the pertinence and necessity of such services in ensuring access to justice, the limitations of such scientific fields, and addressing gaps in legal proceedings.

Professor Kemp and Yong also delve into the types of proceedings that such services can be applied to, the place for facial recognition technology in such conversations, risks to be navigated, implications for legal practitioners on the ground, case studies and lessons from those proceedings, and also explore how to assess the reliability of one's memory.

To learn more about Unisearch Expert Opinion Services, click here.

If you like this episode, show your support by rating us or leaving a review on Apple Podcasts (The Lawyers Weekly Show) and by following Lawyers Weekly on social media: Facebook, X and LinkedIn.

If you have any questions about what you heard today, any topics of interest you have in mind, or if you'd like to lend your voice to the show, email [email protected]

  continue reading

1195 episodes

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