Purpose. This study focuses on two psychological mechanisms that may inadvertently affect judges' decisions on proof of guilt and on punishment. It involves mechanisms that are clearly in conflict with formal judicial doctrine. One hypothesis, the conviction paradox, asserts that, faced with very serious offences, a judge's standard of proof will be lower than for less serious, but otherwise comparable, offences. A second hypothesis, compensatory punishment, asserts that in cases with relatively weak evidence, judges who nevertheless render a guilty verdict will be inclined to compensate their initial doubt on the matter of guilt by meting out a less severe sentence. Method. The hypotheses are evaluated in an experiment with Dutch judges an...
Empirical research indicates that jurors routinely undervalue circumstantial evidence (DNA, fingerpr...
Legal theorists have characterized physical evidence of brain dysfunction as a double-edged sword, w...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Purpose. This study focuses on two psychological mechanisms that may inadvertently affect judges' de...
In criminal cases the task of the judge is to transform the uncertainty about the facts into the cer...
With few exceptions, jurors in criminal trials exclusively determine whether the defendant is guilty...
A study of the legal and psychological prerequisites for forming a system for counteraction to crime...
Recent empirical research suggests that jurors struggle to understand and correctly apply the standa...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
In criminal cases, the task of the judge is foremost to transform the uncertainty about the facts in...
In their book De slapende rechter (The sleeping judge) Dutch legal psychologists W.A. Wagenaar, H. I...
The authors have conducted research on factors influencing judges decision about punishment making i...
The present study investigates the effect of defendants' feeling of guilt, during their trial as wel...
The notion that a false positive (false conviction) is worse than a false negative (false acquittal)...
Empirical research indicates that jurors routinely undervalue circumstantial evidence (DNA, fingerpr...
Legal theorists have characterized physical evidence of brain dysfunction as a double-edged sword, w...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Purpose. This study focuses on two psychological mechanisms that may inadvertently affect judges' de...
In criminal cases the task of the judge is to transform the uncertainty about the facts into the cer...
With few exceptions, jurors in criminal trials exclusively determine whether the defendant is guilty...
A study of the legal and psychological prerequisites for forming a system for counteraction to crime...
Recent empirical research suggests that jurors struggle to understand and correctly apply the standa...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
In criminal cases, the task of the judge is foremost to transform the uncertainty about the facts in...
In their book De slapende rechter (The sleeping judge) Dutch legal psychologists W.A. Wagenaar, H. I...
The authors have conducted research on factors influencing judges decision about punishment making i...
The present study investigates the effect of defendants' feeling of guilt, during their trial as wel...
The notion that a false positive (false conviction) is worse than a false negative (false acquittal)...
Empirical research indicates that jurors routinely undervalue circumstantial evidence (DNA, fingerpr...
Legal theorists have characterized physical evidence of brain dysfunction as a double-edged sword, w...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...