NCJ Number
84558
Journal
Journal of Applied Social Psychology Volume: 11 Issue: 2 Dated: (1981) Pages: 166-180
Date Published
1981
Length
16 pages
Annotation
This experimental study tests whether or not mock jurors' judgments conformed to legal requirements when jurors were given both guilt-relevant and sanity-relevant information, as are jurors in actual trials.
Abstract
Subjects were given information about a stabbing incident, which varied in incrimination value (high or low), and a psychological profile of the perpetrator, which varied in the degree of indicated insanity (high, medium, or low) in four replications of a 2x3 design. Judgments in the insanity plea replication were significantly affected by incrimination information even though sanity is legally the only issue. Insanity information predictably affected judgments in the sanity hearing but had only weak effects in the insanity plea context. Overall, the judgment dimension which equates insanity with not guilty results in a conflict which subjects resolved by viewing the dimension as more of a guilt dimension. Study data, 1 note, and 6 references are provided. (Author abstract modified)