Attorneys: Personalities and Perception Articles
Bohn, M. J. (1971). Psychological needs of engineering, pre-law, pre-medical, and undecided college freshmen. Journal of College Student Personnel, 12, 359-361.
Brodsky, S. L., Hooper, N. E., Tipper, D. G., and Yates, S. B. (1999). Attorney invasion of witness space. Law and Psychology Review, 23, 49-68.
Coplin, J. W., and Williams, J. E. (1978). Women law students' descriptions of self and the ideal lawyer. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2, 323-333.
Dabbs, J. M., Alford, E. C., and Fielden, J. A. (1998). Trial lawyers and testosterone: Blue-collar talent in a white-collar world. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 28, 84-94.
Diamond, S. S., Casper, J. D., Heiert, C. L., and Marshall, A. (1996). Criminology: Juror reactions to attorneys at trial. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, 87, 17-47.
Elwork, A., Benjamin, G., and Andrew, H. (1995). Lawyers in distress. Journal of Psychiatry and Law, 23, 205-229.
Kassin, S. M., Williams, L. N., and Saunders, C. L. (1990). Dirty tricks of cross-examination: The influence of conjectural evidence on the jury. Law and Human Behavior, 14, 373-384.
Krakowski, A. J. (1984). Stress and the practice of medicine: III. Physicians compared with lawyers. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 42, 143-151.
Linz, D., Penrod, S., and McDonald, E. (1986). Attorney communication and impression making in the courtroom: Views from off the bench. Law and Human Behavior, 10, 281-302.
Pyszczynski, T., Greenberg, J., Mack, D., and Wrightsman, L. S. (1981). Opening statements in a jury trial: The effect of promising more than the evidence can show. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 11, 434-444.
Reich, S. (1976). California Psychological Inventory: Profile of a sample of first-year law students. Psychological Reports, 39, 871-874.
Williams, S. W., and McCullers, J. C. (1983). Personal factors related to typicalness of career and success in active professional women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 7, 343-357.

