Three goals of the research are identified: (a) to gain insight into adult cognition in a complex, naturally occurring reasoning task; (b) to extend existing psychological models of decision making and judgment; and (c) to provide empirical data on questions of interest to the legal community. A comprehensive task analysis is presented in the form of an ideal juror model to describe and evaluate empirical research on juror decision making with respect to these goals. Component processes proposed in each model and empirical findings are compared across models and in relation to the task analysis. Models reviewed include (a) information integration models, (b) Bayesian models, (c) a Poisson model, (d) sequential weighting models, and (e) nonmodels. The conclusions suggest that laboratory models applications to actual complex reasoning tasks must be based on thorough task analyses to avoid conflict between research goals and to facilitate generalization to natural settings. (Publisher abstract)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Reducing Disproportionality in School Discipline among Black Male High School Students: A Randomized Evaluation of a Comprehensive, Whole-School Intervention
- The Ties That Bind: The Association Between Social Network Ties, Integration, and Stress Among Incarcerated Women
- Perceived Financial Vulnerability, Wealth, and Wealth Change: The Health and Retirement Study