TY - JOUR
T1 - Mock juror sampling issues in jury simulation research
T2 - A meta-analysis
AU - Bornstein, Brian H.
AU - Golding, Jonathan M.
AU - Neuschatz, Jeffrey
AU - Kimbrough, Christopher
AU - Reed, Krystia
AU - Magyarics, Casey
AU - Luecht, Katherine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2016 American Psychological Association.
PY - 2017/2/1
Y1 - 2017/2/1
N2 - The advantages and disadvantages of jury simulation research have often been debated in the literature. Critics chiefly argue that jury simulations lack verisimilitude, particularly through their use of student mock jurors, and that this limits the generalizabilty of the findings. In the present article, the question of sample differences (student v. nonstudent) in jury research was meta-analyzed for 6 dependent variables: 3 criminal (guilty verdicts, culpability, and sentencing) and 3 civil (liability verdicts, continuous liability, and damages). In total, 53 studies (N = 17,716) were included in the analysis (40 criminal and 13 civil). The results revealed that guilty verdicts, culpability ratings, and damage awards did not vary with sample. Furthermore, the variables that revealed significant or marginally significant differences, sentencing and liability judgments, had small or contradictory effect sizes (e.g., effects on dichotomous and continuous liability judgments were in opposite directions). In addition, with the exception of trial presentation medium, moderator effects were small and inconsistent. These results may help to alleviate concerns regarding the use of student samples in jury simulation research.
AB - The advantages and disadvantages of jury simulation research have often been debated in the literature. Critics chiefly argue that jury simulations lack verisimilitude, particularly through their use of student mock jurors, and that this limits the generalizabilty of the findings. In the present article, the question of sample differences (student v. nonstudent) in jury research was meta-analyzed for 6 dependent variables: 3 criminal (guilty verdicts, culpability, and sentencing) and 3 civil (liability verdicts, continuous liability, and damages). In total, 53 studies (N = 17,716) were included in the analysis (40 criminal and 13 civil). The results revealed that guilty verdicts, culpability ratings, and damage awards did not vary with sample. Furthermore, the variables that revealed significant or marginally significant differences, sentencing and liability judgments, had small or contradictory effect sizes (e.g., effects on dichotomous and continuous liability judgments were in opposite directions). In addition, with the exception of trial presentation medium, moderator effects were small and inconsistent. These results may help to alleviate concerns regarding the use of student samples in jury simulation research.
KW - juries
KW - juror decision making
KW - meta-analysis
KW - verisimilitude
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U2 - 10.1037/lhb0000223
DO - 10.1037/lhb0000223
M3 - Article
C2 - 27762572
AN - SCOPUS:85007240683
SN - 0147-7307
VL - 41
SP - 13
EP - 28
JO - Law and human behavior
JF - Law and human behavior
IS - 1
ER -