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Blindfolding the Jury to Verdict Consequences: Damages, Experts, and the Civil Jury

Diamond, Shari Seidman ; Casper, Jonathan D.

Law & society review, 1992-01, Vol.26 (3), p.513-563 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Beverly Hills, Calif: Law and Society Association

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  • Título:
    Blindfolding the Jury to Verdict Consequences: Damages, Experts, and the Civil Jury
  • Autor: Diamond, Shari Seidman ; Casper, Jonathan D.
  • Assuntos: Antitrust ; Behavior ; Behaviorism ; Chicago, Illinois ; Defendants ; Information processing ; Juries ; Jurors ; Jury ; Jury system ; Law ; Legal evidence ; Legal System ; Plaintiffs ; Price fixing ; Statistical models ; The Active Juror ; Trials ; U.S.A ; Verdicts
  • É parte de: Law & society review, 1992-01, Vol.26 (3), p.513-563
  • Notas: ObjectType-Article-2
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  • Descrição: This research examines the behavior of jurors as active information processors. Our experimental examination of the performance of the civil jury in response to a complex price-fixing case varies the information provided to jurors about the consequences of their damage award decisions (i.e., the treble damage rule) and the type of expert testimony (statistical models vs. concrete yardstick models). We find, consistent with a picture of the jury as active rather than passive, that jurors are more likely to follow judicial instructions when they are given explanations rather than bald admonitions. In addition, complex expert testimony neither overpowers the jurors nor is dismissed by them. The expert presenting a statistical model is viewed as having higher expertise but lower clarity; as a result the statistical expert and the expert presenting a more concrete model are not significantly different in their persuasiveness. Finally, in contrast to most research on the criminal jury, we find that deliberations do affect jury awards.
  • Editor: Beverly Hills, Calif: Law and Society Association
  • Idioma: Inglês

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