With the popularization of television crime shows that focus heavily on forensic science, such as CSI and its spin-offs, concerns about a new threat to jury trials have emerged in recent years. Dubbed the “CSI effect, ” this phenomenon has reportedly come to influence the way jurors perceive forensic evidence at trials based on the way forensic evidence is presented on television. While the CSI effect has been the topic of much discussion throughout the popular press, the CSI effect has seldom been empirically tested. In this study, we present a selection of media accounts as well as criminological and legal literature that provides a review of the current state of the CSI effect. Additionally, we present the findings of a survey of 60 juro...
This is a quantitative exploration of one construct of the CSI effect, the presumed impact of law- a...
It has been argued that the rise in popularity of crime show dramas over the past few years has led ...
© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. The present research examine...
With the popularization of television crime shows that focus heavily on forensic science, such as CS...
Television shows, in particular CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, have captured the attention of the m...
The CSI effect is a term that legal authorities and the mass media have coined to describe a suppo...
Some researchers have contended that jurors in criminal trials have unrealistic expectations for the...
This article is the first empirical study of jurors designed to investigate the existence and extent...
Legal professionals have raised concerns about a possible 'CSI Effect' operating in courtrooms. This...
With the proliferation of fictionalised portrayals of forensic science, typified by the CSI series o...
This study reports the results of a questionnaire that was completed by 97 undergraduate students at...
The “CSI Effect” was first described in the media as a phenomenon resulting from viewing forensic an...
The CSI-Effect (Crime Scene Investigation Effect) proposes that jurors tend to acquit suspects when ...
abstract: The effects that forensic-themed programs such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation has on th...
Anecdotal claims from legal professionals suggest that jurors are increasingly expecting DNA evidenc...
This is a quantitative exploration of one construct of the CSI effect, the presumed impact of law- a...
It has been argued that the rise in popularity of crime show dramas over the past few years has led ...
© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. The present research examine...
With the popularization of television crime shows that focus heavily on forensic science, such as CS...
Television shows, in particular CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, have captured the attention of the m...
The CSI effect is a term that legal authorities and the mass media have coined to describe a suppo...
Some researchers have contended that jurors in criminal trials have unrealistic expectations for the...
This article is the first empirical study of jurors designed to investigate the existence and extent...
Legal professionals have raised concerns about a possible 'CSI Effect' operating in courtrooms. This...
With the proliferation of fictionalised portrayals of forensic science, typified by the CSI series o...
This study reports the results of a questionnaire that was completed by 97 undergraduate students at...
The “CSI Effect” was first described in the media as a phenomenon resulting from viewing forensic an...
The CSI-Effect (Crime Scene Investigation Effect) proposes that jurors tend to acquit suspects when ...
abstract: The effects that forensic-themed programs such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation has on th...
Anecdotal claims from legal professionals suggest that jurors are increasingly expecting DNA evidenc...
This is a quantitative exploration of one construct of the CSI effect, the presumed impact of law- a...
It has been argued that the rise in popularity of crime show dramas over the past few years has led ...
© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. The present research examine...