This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly signals about a defendant's guilt, with a larger jury size the probability of reaching a correct verdict may in fact fall, contrary to the Condorcet Jury Theorem. We show that if the jurors coordinate on any one of a number of (equally plausible) asymmetric equilibria other than the symmetric equilibrium considered by Mukhopadhaya, the probability of accuracy reaches a maximum for a particular jury size and remains unchanged with larger juries, thus mitigating Mukhopadhaya's result somewhat. However, the case for limiting the jury size-a recommendation by Mukhopadhaya-gains additional grounds if one shifts the focus from maximizing the probabil...
open3noJuries are a fundamental element of the criminal justice system. In this article, we model ju...
It is known that, in Condorcet’s classical model of jury decisions, the proportion of jurors support...
Consider the hypothesis H that a defendant is guilty (a patient has condition C), and the evidence E...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
Abstract For judicial democracy, many societies adopt jury trials, where verdicts are made by a unan...
Juries are a fundamental element of the criminal justice system. In this article, we model jury deci...
Suppose paying attention during jury trials is costly, but that jurors do not pool information (as i...
International audienceWe give a review and critique of jury theorems from a social-epistemology pers...
article published in law journalThere has been a spate of interest in the application of the Condorc...
Under the independence and competence assumptions of Condorcet’s classical jury model, the probabili...
International audienceWe give a review and critique of jury theorems from a social-epistemology pers...
periments. We also thank Tim Feddersen, Susanne Lohmann, Krishna Ladha, the audiences at several aca...
open3noJuries are a fundamental element of the criminal justice system. In this article, we model ju...
It is known that, in Condorcet’s classical model of jury decisions, the proportion of jurors support...
Consider the hypothesis H that a defendant is guilty (a patient has condition C), and the evidence E...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
This note reassesses the basic result in Mukhopadhaya (2003) that, when jurors may acquire costly si...
Abstract For judicial democracy, many societies adopt jury trials, where verdicts are made by a unan...
Juries are a fundamental element of the criminal justice system. In this article, we model jury deci...
Suppose paying attention during jury trials is costly, but that jurors do not pool information (as i...
International audienceWe give a review and critique of jury theorems from a social-epistemology pers...
article published in law journalThere has been a spate of interest in the application of the Condorc...
Under the independence and competence assumptions of Condorcet’s classical jury model, the probabili...
International audienceWe give a review and critique of jury theorems from a social-epistemology pers...
periments. We also thank Tim Feddersen, Susanne Lohmann, Krishna Ladha, the audiences at several aca...
open3noJuries are a fundamental element of the criminal justice system. In this article, we model ju...
It is known that, in Condorcet’s classical model of jury decisions, the proportion of jurors support...
Consider the hypothesis H that a defendant is guilty (a patient has condition C), and the evidence E...