May, L. (2017). Eliciting information from sources and suspects (Doctoral dissertation, University of Kiel). Retrieved from https://macau.uni-kiel.de/receive/dissertation_diss_00022032
May, L. (2018). Glaubhaftigkeit. In Europäische Fernhochschule Hamburg (Hrsg.), Studienheft: Rechtspsychologische Sachverständigentätigkeit.
May, L. (2019). Verhöre, Vernehmungen und Befragungen: Was für Aussagen sind zu erwarten? In C. Bischoff, C. Juwig & L. Sommer (Hrsg.) Bekenntnisse: Formen und Formeln (S. 101-118). Berlin: Reimer Verlag.
May, L., Gewehr, E., Zimmermann, J., Raible, Y., & Volbert, R. (2020). How Guilty and Innocent Suspects Perceive the Police and Themselves: Suspect Interviews in Germany. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 26, p. 42–61. https://doi.org/10.1111/lcrp.12184
May, L., Granhag, P. A., & Oleszkiewicz, S. (2014). Eliciting intelligence using the Scharff-technique: Closing in on the Confirmation/Disconfirmation-tactic. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling, 11(2), 136-150. doi:10.1002/jip.1412
May, L., & Granhag, P. A. (2016). Techniques for eliciting human intelligence: Examining possible order effects of the Scharff tactics. Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law, 23(2), 275-287. doi: 10.1080/13218719.2015.1054410
May, L., & Granhag, P. A. (2016). Using the Scharff-technique to elicit information: How to effectively establish the “illusion of knowing it all”? The European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context, 8(2) 79-85. doi: 10.1016/j.ejpal.2016.02.001
May, L., Granhag, P. A., & Tekin, S. (2017). Interviewing Suspects in Denial: On How Different Evidence Disclosure Modes Affect the Elicitation of New Critical Information. Frontiers in Psychology, 8, 1–11. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01154
Volbert, R. & May, L. (2016). Falsche Geständnisse in polizeilichen Vernehmungen – Vernehmungsfehler oder immanente Gefahr? (False confessions in police interviews – interviewing error or immanent risk?) Recht & Psychiatrie, 34, 4-10.
Volbert, R., May, L., Hausam, J., & Lau, S. (2019). Confessions and denials when guilty and innocent: Forensic patients’ self-reported behavior during police interviews. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10: 168. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00168