Previous research demonstrates that lawyers and law students are, on average, prone to overconfidence bias and self-serving judgments of fairness when they take on a representative lawyering role. This is the first study to investigate individual differences in susceptibility to these biases. Expanding on two previous experiments, and utilizing as our sample 468 law students from twelve geographically diverse U.S. law schools, we examined whether differences in students’ Need for Cognitive Closure (NFC) — a motivational desire for clear answers over ambiguity — would affect both their judicial outcome predictions and their assessments of the “fair settlement value” of a simulated personal injury case when assigned randomly to the role of pl...
I approached this paper with the intention of studying the impact of legal research instructor resou...
The institutional legitmacy of the judiciary depends on the quality of the judgments that judges mak...
To have an informed discussion about judicial performance and efficiency, we will sometimes want to ...
When people are placed in a partisan role or otherwise have an objective they seek to accomplish, th...
Cognitive science has revealed that past experiences and prior assumptions, even those of which we a...
This Article explores methods law professors can employ to address the cognitive biases their law st...
This article discusses the role of cognitive bias in legal decision making. Drawing on research in c...
Common law judges have traditionally been concerned about bias and the appearance of bias. Bias is b...
For contemporary legal theory, law is essentially an interpretative and hermeneutic practice (Ackerm...
This article examines how bias and prejudice may impact the decision making process of our judiciary...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
This Article explores the effects of a judge’s prior assumptions, values, and experiences on judicia...
Recent work in the behavioral sciences asserts that we are subject to a variety of cognitive biases....
The current study examined the relationship between juror cognitive processing (measured by need for...
Scholars and litigators alike have long wondered about what is on the minds of judges. Kahan et al. ...
I approached this paper with the intention of studying the impact of legal research instructor resou...
The institutional legitmacy of the judiciary depends on the quality of the judgments that judges mak...
To have an informed discussion about judicial performance and efficiency, we will sometimes want to ...
When people are placed in a partisan role or otherwise have an objective they seek to accomplish, th...
Cognitive science has revealed that past experiences and prior assumptions, even those of which we a...
This Article explores methods law professors can employ to address the cognitive biases their law st...
This article discusses the role of cognitive bias in legal decision making. Drawing on research in c...
Common law judges have traditionally been concerned about bias and the appearance of bias. Bias is b...
For contemporary legal theory, law is essentially an interpretative and hermeneutic practice (Ackerm...
This article examines how bias and prejudice may impact the decision making process of our judiciary...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
This Article explores the effects of a judge’s prior assumptions, values, and experiences on judicia...
Recent work in the behavioral sciences asserts that we are subject to a variety of cognitive biases....
The current study examined the relationship between juror cognitive processing (measured by need for...
Scholars and litigators alike have long wondered about what is on the minds of judges. Kahan et al. ...
I approached this paper with the intention of studying the impact of legal research instructor resou...
The institutional legitmacy of the judiciary depends on the quality of the judgments that judges mak...
To have an informed discussion about judicial performance and efficiency, we will sometimes want to ...