Forensic testimony plays a crucial role in many criminal cases, with requests to crime laboratories steadily increasing. As part of efforts to improve the reliability of forensic evidence, scientific and policy groups increasingly recommend routine and blind proficiency tests of practitioners. What is not known is how doing so affects how lay jurors assess testimony by forensic practitioners in court. In Study 1, we recruited 1398 lay participants, recruited online using Qualtrics to create a sample representative of the U.S. population with respect to age, gender, income, race/ethnicity, and geographic region. Each read a mock criminal trial transcript in which a forensic examiner presented the central evidence. The low-proficiency forensi...
Eyewitness testimony is a compelling form of evidence, and mistaken identification is a factor in mo...
Purpose. Little research has been conducted on the effects of courtroom examination/questioning styl...
Mistaken eyewitness identifications of innocent lead to more false convictions in the United States ...
Objectives: Firearms experts traditionally have testified that a weapon leaves “unique” toolmarks, s...
To evaluate association, firearms examiners compare tool-marks present on suspect ammunition to thos...
Contextual bias has been widely discussed as a possible problem in forensic science. The trial simul...
Forensic examiners regularly testify in criminal cases, informing the jurors whether crime scene evi...
Black and White mock jurors’ sensitivity to the cross-race effect was investigated by varying the ra...
The criminal justice system generally assumes that jurors have a base knowledge and understanding of...
The purpose of Study 1 was to look at how participants perceived identification testimony as a funct...
In cases involving scientific evidence in the form of a test result linking the accused to a crime (...
In instances where jurors don’t know or are not expected to understand a particular area of evidence...
In adversarial legal systems across the world, witnesses in criminal trials are subjected to cross-e...
The unique decision making task entrusted to lay juries in adversarial legal systems has attracted t...
Eyewitness testimony is highly influential on jurors’ verdict, however, it is generally unreliable. ...
Eyewitness testimony is a compelling form of evidence, and mistaken identification is a factor in mo...
Purpose. Little research has been conducted on the effects of courtroom examination/questioning styl...
Mistaken eyewitness identifications of innocent lead to more false convictions in the United States ...
Objectives: Firearms experts traditionally have testified that a weapon leaves “unique” toolmarks, s...
To evaluate association, firearms examiners compare tool-marks present on suspect ammunition to thos...
Contextual bias has been widely discussed as a possible problem in forensic science. The trial simul...
Forensic examiners regularly testify in criminal cases, informing the jurors whether crime scene evi...
Black and White mock jurors’ sensitivity to the cross-race effect was investigated by varying the ra...
The criminal justice system generally assumes that jurors have a base knowledge and understanding of...
The purpose of Study 1 was to look at how participants perceived identification testimony as a funct...
In cases involving scientific evidence in the form of a test result linking the accused to a crime (...
In instances where jurors don’t know or are not expected to understand a particular area of evidence...
In adversarial legal systems across the world, witnesses in criminal trials are subjected to cross-e...
The unique decision making task entrusted to lay juries in adversarial legal systems has attracted t...
Eyewitness testimony is highly influential on jurors’ verdict, however, it is generally unreliable. ...
Eyewitness testimony is a compelling form of evidence, and mistaken identification is a factor in mo...
Purpose. Little research has been conducted on the effects of courtroom examination/questioning styl...
Mistaken eyewitness identifications of innocent lead to more false convictions in the United States ...