  |
| |
Koehler, J. J., & Thompson, W. C. (in
press). Mock jurors' reactions to selective presentation of
evidence from multiple-opportunity searches.
Prior to trial, litigants sometimes conduct broad
investigations in which there are multiple opportunities to find
supportive evidence by chance alone. During trial, litigants may
selectively present only the most helpful evidence uncovered by their
investigations. Two experiments examined whether mock jurors appreciate
that the evidence they hear at trial may be a selective and
unrepresentative sample of underlying facts. The data suggest that people
do understand the significance of multiple-opportunity searches for legal
inference. However, they may not consider the possibility that evidence
was strategically selected from a larger sample space of facts unless that
sample space is identified.
Return to Vita
|
|