What do jurors want to know? Jury research tells us that jurors want to understand the information they hear in a trial so they can reach the correct decision. But like all people, jurors who are asked to analyze information in a trial—even jurors who consciously want to reach a fair and accurate verdict—are unconsciously influenced by their internal goals and motivations. Some of these motives are specific to individual jurors; for instance, a potential juror with a financial interest in a case would be excluded from the jury pool. But other motivations, like the motive to understand the law and to reach an accurate verdict, are core social motives that influence the cognition of all jurors. Although those motives may be less obvious than ...
This study examined the effects of psycholegal knowledge on a mock jury decision-making task. Psycho...
Each year in the United States there are over 150,000 jury trials. Theoretically, the jury serves as...
“Experts” appear in the modern American courtroom on the jury as well as in the witness box, posing ...
What do jurors want to know? Jury research tells us that jurors want to understand the information t...
What do jurors want to know? Jury research tells us that jurors want to understand the information t...
Inside the Juror presents the most interesting and sophisticated work to date on juror decision maki...
Through the Eyes of Jurors is the first law journal article to consider all of the major cognitive ...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and...
“Through the Eyes of Jurors” is the first law journal article to consider all of the major cognitive...
Lay jurors are often legally and logically unprepared for trial. In response, it is recommended that...
The jury has undergone a dramatic transformation from its earliest incarnation when jurors acted as ...
This article offers an unprecedented empirical window into prosecutorial discretion drawing on long-...
This study of individualized jury selection for 792 potentialjurors across 12 North Carolina capital...
This study examined the effects of psycholegal knowledge on a mock jury decision-making task. Psycho...
Each year in the United States there are over 150,000 jury trials. Theoretically, the jury serves as...
“Experts” appear in the modern American courtroom on the jury as well as in the witness box, posing ...
What do jurors want to know? Jury research tells us that jurors want to understand the information t...
What do jurors want to know? Jury research tells us that jurors want to understand the information t...
Inside the Juror presents the most interesting and sophisticated work to date on juror decision maki...
Through the Eyes of Jurors is the first law journal article to consider all of the major cognitive ...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
Procedural justice research suggests that, as decision makers in a trial, jurors may be unwilling to...
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and...
“Through the Eyes of Jurors” is the first law journal article to consider all of the major cognitive...
Lay jurors are often legally and logically unprepared for trial. In response, it is recommended that...
The jury has undergone a dramatic transformation from its earliest incarnation when jurors acted as ...
This article offers an unprecedented empirical window into prosecutorial discretion drawing on long-...
This study of individualized jury selection for 792 potentialjurors across 12 North Carolina capital...
This study examined the effects of psycholegal knowledge on a mock jury decision-making task. Psycho...
Each year in the United States there are over 150,000 jury trials. Theoretically, the jury serves as...
“Experts” appear in the modern American courtroom on the jury as well as in the witness box, posing ...