Psychology

Human cognitive neuroscience seminar

Speaker: Dr Lee Curley (Edinburgh Napier University)

Title: Faith in thy threshold: An investigation of the decision making processes of jurors

Abstract: The current study focused on the decision-making processes of jurors. The study investigated how jurors make a decision, if they integrate information within their decision-making process and if cue utilisation thresholds promote confirmation bias. To do this, 108 participants listened to one of nine cases. These participants were asked to give a likelihood of guilt rating after each piece of evidence, to state what the last piece of information was that they needed to make a decision and to give a final verdict at the end of a trial. The results highlighted that threshold decision making was being utilised, that information integration may allow thresholds to be reached and that thresholds may promote confirmation bias to reduce cognitive dissonance. In conclusion, this suggests that jurors integrate information until they reach a leading verdict, then the evaluation of information is distorted to support the leading threshold. Implications relate to legal instructions for jurors.

Contact

The seminars are organised by the Human Cognitive Neuroscience research group. For further information, or if you would like to join the e-mail list for these seminars, please email Ed Silson.

Ed Silson

Human cognitive neuroscience

 

Nov 14 2018 -

Human cognitive neuroscience seminar

2018-11-14: Dr Lee Curley (Edinburgh Napier University)

Lecture Theatre F21, Psychology Building, 7 George Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9JZ