被告说了算——刑事诉讼中实验性操纵秩序与事实的临时评估

C. Engel, A. Glöckner, Sinika Timme
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引用次数: 5

摘要

从规范的角度来看,提供证据的顺序不应影响法律判断。然而,关于个体如何处理相互矛盾的证据的心理学研究表明,顺序可能很重要。证据表明,决策者通过建立连贯来消除歧义。这个过程可能会导致首因效应:最初的试探性解释会对后来相互矛盾的证据产生偏见。或者,这个过程可能会产生一种近因效应:最后提出的证据对案件具有决定性意义。在两项研究(N1 = 221, N2 = 332)中,我们在模拟法律案件中检验了这些相互竞争的假设。法律命令有时甚至要求法官暂时评估证据。至少他们很难阻止这种情况的发生。为了测试这是否会造成或加剧偏见,在第二个维度中,我们明确要求实验参与者在看到一半的证据后表达他们的倾向。我们一直观察到近因效应,与学习没有相互作用。如果法律秩序想要阻止错误的定罪,被告应该有最后的发言权。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Defendant Should Have the Last Word – Experimentally Manipulating Order and Provisional Assessment of the Facts in Criminal Procedure
From a normative perspective the order in which evidence is presented should not bias legal judgment. Yet psychological research on how individuals process conflicting evidence sug-gests that order could matter. The evidence shows that decision-makers dissolve ambiguity by forging coherence. This process could lead to a primacy effect: initial tentative interpretations bias the view on later conflicting evidence. Or the process could result in a recency effect: the evidence presented last casts decisive light on the case. In two studies (N1 = 221, N2 = 332) we test these competing hypotheses in a mock legal case. Legal orders sometimes even expect judges to provisionally assess the evidence. At least they have a hard time preventing this from happening. To test whether this creates or exacerbates bias, in the second dimensions, we explicitly demand experimental participants to express their leaning, after having seen half of the evidence. We consistently observe recency effects and no interactions with leanings. If the legal order wants to preempt false convictions, defendant should have the last word.
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