The present study investigated whether people used the gender of an expert witness as a heuristic cue to evaluate the evidence presented by the expert. Specifically, the gender of the expert and the complexity of the expert's testimony (low, high) were varied systematically within a simulated civil trial involving an antitrust price-fixing agreement. It was expected that the male expert would be more persuasive than the female expert, but only when the testimony presented was complex. As predicted, this interaction was revealed across a range of dependent measures. Somewhat unexpected was the finding of a female expert advantage in the low-complexity condition. The implications of these findings are discussed
This review of women’s participation in the legal system as expert witnesses examines the empirical ...
Undergraduate students served as mock jurors by listening to audio recorded testimony of a medical e...
Mock jurors rely on a variety of heuristics and stereotypes about expert witnesses when evaluating t...
The present study investigated whether people used the gender of an expert witness as a heuristic cu...
The present study investigated whether people used the gender of an expert witness as a heuristic cu...
This study uses a simulated civil trial to examine the effect of a male expert's testimony in a male...
With the increased use in expert witness testimony in civil trials, the decisions that jury members ...
Jurors’ perceptions of expert witness credibility are vital to the expert’s overall effectiveness as...
Expert witness testimony is often complex and difficult to understand. As a result, jurors may rely ...
The present study investigated whether the impact of expert testimony was influenced by the congruen...
The present study investigated whether the impact of expert testimony was influenced by the congruen...
With continuous advancements in forensic science, expert testimony has become more common in crimina...
This study examined the effects of juror and expert witness gender on jurors\u27 perceptions of an e...
Although expert psychological testimony it is not present in every trial, it has the potential to gr...
This review of women’s participation in the legal system as expert witnesses examines the empirical ...
This review of women’s participation in the legal system as expert witnesses examines the empirical ...
Undergraduate students served as mock jurors by listening to audio recorded testimony of a medical e...
Mock jurors rely on a variety of heuristics and stereotypes about expert witnesses when evaluating t...
The present study investigated whether people used the gender of an expert witness as a heuristic cu...
The present study investigated whether people used the gender of an expert witness as a heuristic cu...
This study uses a simulated civil trial to examine the effect of a male expert's testimony in a male...
With the increased use in expert witness testimony in civil trials, the decisions that jury members ...
Jurors’ perceptions of expert witness credibility are vital to the expert’s overall effectiveness as...
Expert witness testimony is often complex and difficult to understand. As a result, jurors may rely ...
The present study investigated whether the impact of expert testimony was influenced by the congruen...
The present study investigated whether the impact of expert testimony was influenced by the congruen...
With continuous advancements in forensic science, expert testimony has become more common in crimina...
This study examined the effects of juror and expert witness gender on jurors\u27 perceptions of an e...
Although expert psychological testimony it is not present in every trial, it has the potential to gr...
This review of women’s participation in the legal system as expert witnesses examines the empirical ...
This review of women’s participation in the legal system as expert witnesses examines the empirical ...
Undergraduate students served as mock jurors by listening to audio recorded testimony of a medical e...
Mock jurors rely on a variety of heuristics and stereotypes about expert witnesses when evaluating t...