Literature DB >> 9119796

Does expert psychological testimony inform or influence juror decision making? A social cognitive analysis.

M B Kovera1, A W Gresham, E Borgida, E Gray, P C Regan.   

Abstract

The authors examined whether expert testimony serves an educational or a persuasive function. Participants watched a simulated sexual abuse trial in which the child witness had been prepared for her testimony (i.e., she was calm, composed, and confident) or unprepared (i.e., emotional, confused, and uncertain). The trial contained different levels of expert testimony: none, standard (i.e., a summary of the research), repetitive (i.e., standard testimony plus a 2nd summary of the research), or concrete (i.e., standard testimony plus a hypothetical scenario linking the research to the case facts) testimony. Repetitive testimony bolstered the child's testimony, whereas concrete and standard testimony did not. Concrete testimony sensitized jurors to behavioral correlates of sexual victimization; standard and repetitive testimony desensitized jurors to these correlates. Implications for the use of procedural innovations in sexual abuse trials are discussed.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9119796     DOI: 10.1037/0021-9010.82.1.178

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Psychol        ISSN: 0021-9010


  6 in total

1.  "How did you feel?": increasing child sexual abuse witnesses' production of evaluative information.

Authors:  Thomas D Lyon; Nicholas Scurich; Karen Choi; Sally Handmaker; Rebecca Blank
Journal:  Law Hum Behav       Date:  2012-02-06

2.  Can jurors recognize missing control groups, confounds, and experimenter bias in psychological science?

Authors:  Bradley D McAuliff; Margaret Bull Kovera; Gabriel Nunez
Journal:  Law Hum Behav       Date:  2008-06-28

3.  Adversarial allegiance: The devil is in the evidence details, not just on the witness stand.

Authors:  Bradley D McAuliff; Jeana L Arter
Journal:  Law Hum Behav       Date:  2016-05-30

4.  How Attorneys Question Children About the Dynamics of Sexual Abuse and Disclosure in Criminal Trials.

Authors:  Stacia N Stolzenberg; Thomas D Lyon
Journal:  Psychol Public Policy Law       Date:  2014-01-01

5.  Do Jurors Get What They Expect? Traditional versus Alternative Forms of Children's Testimony.

Authors:  Bradley D McAuliff; Margaret Bull Kovera
Journal:  Psychol Crime Law       Date:  2012-01-06

6.  I spy with my little eye: jurors' detection of internal validity threats in expert evidence.

Authors:  Bradley D McAuliff; Tejah D Duckworth
Journal:  Law Hum Behav       Date:  2010-12
  6 in total

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