2013
DOI: 10.1080/15228932.2013.795816
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Death Penalty Decisions: Instruction Comprehension, Attitudes, and Decision Mediators

Abstract: A primary goal of this research was to empirically evaluate a set of assumptions, advanced in the Supreme Court’s ruling in Buchanan v. Angelone (1998), about jury comprehension of death penalty instructions. Further, this research examined the use of evidence in capital punishment decision making by exploring underlying mediating factors upon which death penalty decisions may be based. Manipulated variables included the type of instructions and several variations of evidence. Study 1 was a paper and pencil st… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Results are generally the same as with other jury instructions: jurors have poor comprehension of instructions, generally ranging from 25 to 70 % accuracy depending on the topic (e.g., Blankenship et al, 1997 ;Frank & Applegate, 1998 ;Wiener et al, 1995 ). These results are consistent in samples of jury eligible adults (Frank & Applegate, 1998 ), upper-level undergraduates (Haney & Lynch, 1994, university students (Patry & Penrod, 2013 ), and actual jurors (Foglia, 2003 ).…”
Section: The Psychological Perspectivesupporting
confidence: 69%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Results are generally the same as with other jury instructions: jurors have poor comprehension of instructions, generally ranging from 25 to 70 % accuracy depending on the topic (e.g., Blankenship et al, 1997 ;Frank & Applegate, 1998 ;Wiener et al, 1995 ). These results are consistent in samples of jury eligible adults (Frank & Applegate, 1998 ), upper-level undergraduates (Haney & Lynch, 1994, university students (Patry & Penrod, 2013 ), and actual jurors (Foglia, 2003 ).…”
Section: The Psychological Perspectivesupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Specifi cally, standard death penalty instructions increase the likelihood that jurors will rule in favor of the death penalty, compared to instructions rewritten to improve comprehension (Patry & Penrod, 2013 ;Shaked-Schroer, Costanzo, & Marcus-Newhall, 2008 ). This bias might be in part because participants seem to struggle most with concepts like mitigation, which are factors that should make the defendant less worthy of the death penalty (Blankenship et al, 1997 ;Frank & Applegate, 1998 ;Haney & Lynch, 1997 ).…”
Section: The Psychological Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%