Canadian Policing Research Catalogue

The influence of eyewitness age, type of descriptor inconsistencies, and familiarity with defendant on mock jurors' perceptions of eyewitness testimony / by Jennifer Reed.

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Canadian Policing Research

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e-Books

Authors

Publishers

Bibliography

Includes bibliographical references (pages 63-72).

Description

1 online resource (x, 97 pages)

Note

Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2014.

Summary

"Eyewitness evidence can play a key role in juror decision making. This study examines the influence of eyewitness age (10 vs. 20 years old), type of descriptor inconsistencies (no descriptor inconsistencies, inconsistencies related to easy-to-change ‘non-permanent’ features or inconsistencies related to difficult-to-change, ‘permanent’ features), and familiarity with the defendant on participants acting as mock jurors’ assessments of eyewitness and defendant integrity, continuous guilt ratings, and dichotomous verdicts. Participants were asked to read one of 12 versions of a trial transcript and then answered a self-report questionnaire. Eyewitness age did not have a significant effect on any dependent variables. Familiarity had a marginal effect on guilt assessments, both continuous and dichotomous. The presence of any descriptor inconsistencies led jurors to believe the eyewitness more, defendant less, and assign more guilt to the defendant. However, the type, i.e. non-permanent or permanent, did not differentially impact assessments."--Page ii.

Subject

Online Access

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