Two experiments investigated jurors ’ ability to disregard unusual inadmissible evidence. Participants listened to an audio recording of a theft trial. Those in four experimental conditions heard critical testimony favoring the prosecution, which was ruled either admissible or inadmissible and which contained either neutral details or details that were unusual in terms of semantic content (Experiment 1) or form (Experiment 2). Control jurors received no critical evidence. Exposure to unusual rather than neutral evidence led jurors to see the defendant as more guilty but only if that evidence was inadmissible instead of admissible. Additionally, jurors remembered unusual evidence better than neutral evidence. The results are consistent with ...
Previous research has examined the validity of behavioral assumptions underlying the presumed effect...
Mock jurors read a fictional trial transcript that manipulated the consistency of the witness's firs...
The courts have long been concerned that exposure to media coverage regarding a case making its way ...
This experiment was a replication and extension of Pickel, Karam, and Warner's (2006) study by using...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
The potential effects of stricken evidence on jurors' decisions is a problem for legal proceedings, ...
There is considerable evidence that jurors attribute significant weight to testimony in which an eye...
A mock juror study tested three hypotheses: (a) Jurors comply selectively with instructions to disre...
Most legal systems require jurors to consider all the evidence presented at trial. Hence when there ...
The purpose of this study was to determine whether jurors can disregard inadmissible evidence when i...
Researchers have proposed many explanations for the replicated finding that jurors often fail to dis...
Attorneys object at trial to immediately correct errors or to preserve the record for appeal; howeve...
We tested whether inducing participants to think counterfactually about a case involving eyewitness ...
Compared to categorical identifications, culprit likelihood ratings (having the witness rate, for ea...
Previous research has examined the validity of behavioral assumptions underlying the presumed effect...
Mock jurors read a fictional trial transcript that manipulated the consistency of the witness's firs...
The courts have long been concerned that exposure to media coverage regarding a case making its way ...
This experiment was a replication and extension of Pickel, Karam, and Warner's (2006) study by using...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
The potential effects of stricken evidence on jurors' decisions is a problem for legal proceedings, ...
There is considerable evidence that jurors attribute significant weight to testimony in which an eye...
A mock juror study tested three hypotheses: (a) Jurors comply selectively with instructions to disre...
Most legal systems require jurors to consider all the evidence presented at trial. Hence when there ...
The purpose of this study was to determine whether jurors can disregard inadmissible evidence when i...
Researchers have proposed many explanations for the replicated finding that jurors often fail to dis...
Attorneys object at trial to immediately correct errors or to preserve the record for appeal; howeve...
We tested whether inducing participants to think counterfactually about a case involving eyewitness ...
Compared to categorical identifications, culprit likelihood ratings (having the witness rate, for ea...
Previous research has examined the validity of behavioral assumptions underlying the presumed effect...
Mock jurors read a fictional trial transcript that manipulated the consistency of the witness's firs...
The courts have long been concerned that exposure to media coverage regarding a case making its way ...