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The effects of notetaking and trial manuscript access on mock jury decisions in a complex civil trial

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-03, 00:54 authored by Irwin Horowitz, Lynne Forsterlee
<p dir="ltr">Mock juries were either permitted to take notes or not and provided with access to the trial transcript during deliberations or were not given access. Juries viewed a videotape of a complex trial involving multiple plaintiffs. Note-taking juries were able to distinguish among differentially worthy plaintiffs when assigning awards while non note takers did not distinguish among the plaintiffs and allocated higher overall compensation. Note-taking was significantly more effective than access to trial transcripts in increasing jury competence. Note-taking juries appeared better able to recognize probative evidence and reject false lures than were non note-taking juries. Limits and implications of the present study were discussed.</p>

Funding

National Science Foundation (SBE 93496300)

History

Volume

25

Issue

4

Start Page

373

End Page

391

eISSN

1573-661X

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Journal

Law and Human Behavior

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