Education
Ph.D., Psychology
CUNY Graduate Center, 2014
M.A., Forensic Psychology
John Jay College of Criminal
Justice, 2012
B.A., Psychology
Loyola College in Maryland, 2009
Areas of Expertise
Human Factors in Forensic Science
Life After Wrongful Conviction
Police Interrogations & False Confessions
The PLaTO Lab
Dr. Kukucka's PLaTo (Psychology and Law at Towson) Lab consists of graduate and undergraduate
students who are interested in applying psychological science to the criminal justice
system.
To learn more about Dr. Kukucka's extensive research on human factors in forensic
science and life after exonerations, visit his and profiles, and read about the work underway in the .
Biography
Jeff Kukucka graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Loyola College in Maryland.
As an undergraduate, he became involved in research on conformity in eyewitness memory
with (Towson University) and research on child forensic interviewing and metacognition
with (Johns Hopkins Medical Institute). He then graduated from the Ph.D. Program in Psychology
& Law at the CUNY Graduate Center, where he worked primarily under (John Jay College of Criminal Justice).
Research Interests
Dr. Kukucka is broadly interested in the psychological causes and consequences of
wrongful convictions in the criminal legal system, with a particular focus on forensic
science errors, post-exoneration adjustment, cognitive biases, and police interrogations.
in the media
- Dr. Kukucka's Psychology Today blog, , looks at the many ways in which psychology can help us understand, and prevent,
miscarriages of criminal justice.
- With George Floyd, a Raging Debate Over Bias in the Science of Death, , April, 2021.
Selected Publications
Kukucka, J., Horodyski, A. M., & Dardis, C. M. (in press). The exoneree health and life experiences
(ExHaLE) study: Trauma exposure and mental health among wrongly convicted individuals. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law.
Dror, I. E., Melinek, J., Arden, J. L., Kukucka, J., Hawkins, S., Carter, J., & Atherton, D. (2021). Cognitive bias in forensic pathology
decisions. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 66, 1751-1757.
Growns, B., & Kukucka, J. (2021). The prevalence effect in fingerprint identification: Match and non-match
base rates impact misses and false alarms. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 35, 751-760.
Kukucka, J., Applegarth, H. K., & Mello, A. L. (2020). Do exonerees face employment discrimination
similar to actual offenders? Legal and Criminological Psychology, 25, 17-32.
Kassin, S. M., Dror, I. E., & Kukucka, J. (2013). The forensic confirmation bias: Problems, perspectives, and proposed solutions. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 2, 42-52.
Courses Taught
-
PSYC 212: Behavioral Statistics
-
PSYC 687: Advanced Experimental Design I
-
PSYC 688: Advanced Experimental Design II
-
PSYC 689: Multivariate Methods
Honors and Awards
- Association for Psychological Science "Rising Star," 2021
- American Psychology-Law Society Saleem Shah Award for Early Career Excellence, 2020
- St. Paul's School Distinguished Young Alumnus Award, 2020
- Towson University Honors College Professor of the Year, 2018
- Psi Chi Eastern Regional Faculty Advisor Award (co-winner with Dr. David Earnest),
2017
- Towson University Psi Chi Distinguished Graduate Faculty Award, 2016
- American Psychology-Law Society Dissertation Award (3rd place), 2014