The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants the accused individual the right to a fair and speedy public trial by jury. To insure that this standard is upheld and exercised, the court system has deemed that it is the judge’s duty to remind the jury through instruction of the defendant’s rights. Jurors are informed by the judge that they should exercise impartial decision making based upon the evidence and facts presented by the parties trying the case when deciding upon a verdict. While in theory this would indeed constitute the fair trial by jury, one thing that cannot be overlooked is the fact that individuals are subject to their own biases and stereotypes with the potential to influence their decisions. The purpose of...
In reviewing debates and research evidence about jury trials for our book, American Juries: The Verd...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...
This 2-part study explored how exposure to negative pretrial publicity (Neg-PTP) influences the jury...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
This Leadership White Paper discusses the utilization of jurors in the American judicial system. Aft...
Juries are often thought of as being fair and crucial to producing fair trials. Things such as scien...
Two experiments examined individual and group decision mak-ing when decision criteria led to outcome...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
Encounters with the legal system are unevenly distributed throughout the American population, with B...
grantor: University of TorontoThere is an apparent conflict which exists between the indi...
Pretrial publicity (PTP) can bias jurors’ decisions. The courts often assume such bias can be amelio...
Juries in adversarial courts are tasked with several responsibilities. They are asked to: 1) assess ...
Six empirical studies were designed with the following three objectives: 1) To evaluate the influenc...
This experiment explored how mock-jurors’ (N = 648) guilt decisions, perceptions of the defendant, m...
One of the hallmarks of the American judicial system is the concept of trial by jury, and for said t...
In reviewing debates and research evidence about jury trials for our book, American Juries: The Verd...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...
This 2-part study explored how exposure to negative pretrial publicity (Neg-PTP) influences the jury...
Purpose. The objective of this review was to give a broad overview of various biases associated with...
This Leadership White Paper discusses the utilization of jurors in the American judicial system. Aft...
Juries are often thought of as being fair and crucial to producing fair trials. Things such as scien...
Two experiments examined individual and group decision mak-ing when decision criteria led to outcome...
Courts and commentators routinely assume that “bias” on the jury encompasses any source of influence...
Encounters with the legal system are unevenly distributed throughout the American population, with B...
grantor: University of TorontoThere is an apparent conflict which exists between the indi...
Pretrial publicity (PTP) can bias jurors’ decisions. The courts often assume such bias can be amelio...
Juries in adversarial courts are tasked with several responsibilities. They are asked to: 1) assess ...
Six empirical studies were designed with the following three objectives: 1) To evaluate the influenc...
This experiment explored how mock-jurors’ (N = 648) guilt decisions, perceptions of the defendant, m...
One of the hallmarks of the American judicial system is the concept of trial by jury, and for said t...
In reviewing debates and research evidence about jury trials for our book, American Juries: The Verd...
Prior research by Kaplan and Miller (1978) suggested that juries are generally influenced less by ex...
This 2-part study explored how exposure to negative pretrial publicity (Neg-PTP) influences the jury...