Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?

This survey of 206 forensic psychologists tested the "filtering" effects of preexisting expert attitudes in adversarial proceedings. Results confirmed the hypothesis that evaluator attitudes toward capital punishment influence willingness to accept capital case referrals from particular ad...

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Main Author: Tess M S Neal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4849669?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-21afe9f483d24d83a997614d468a6c262020-11-24T21:09:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015443410.1371/journal.pone.0154434Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?Tess M S NealThis survey of 206 forensic psychologists tested the "filtering" effects of preexisting expert attitudes in adversarial proceedings. Results confirmed the hypothesis that evaluator attitudes toward capital punishment influence willingness to accept capital case referrals from particular adversarial parties. Stronger death penalty opposition was associated with higher willingness to conduct evaluations for the defense and higher likelihood of rejecting referrals from all sources. Conversely, stronger support was associated with higher willingness to be involved in capital cases generally, regardless of referral source. The findings raise the specter of skewed evaluator involvement in capital evaluations, where evaluators willing to do capital casework may have stronger capital punishment support than evaluators who opt out, and evaluators with strong opposition may work selectively for the defense. The results may provide a partial explanation for the "allegiance effect" in adversarial legal settings such that preexisting attitudes may contribute to partisan participation through a self-selection process.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4849669?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tess M S Neal
spellingShingle Tess M S Neal
Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tess M S Neal
author_sort Tess M S Neal
title Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
title_short Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
title_full Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
title_fullStr Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
title_full_unstemmed Are Forensic Experts Already Biased before Adversarial Legal Parties Hire Them?
title_sort are forensic experts already biased before adversarial legal parties hire them?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description This survey of 206 forensic psychologists tested the "filtering" effects of preexisting expert attitudes in adversarial proceedings. Results confirmed the hypothesis that evaluator attitudes toward capital punishment influence willingness to accept capital case referrals from particular adversarial parties. Stronger death penalty opposition was associated with higher willingness to conduct evaluations for the defense and higher likelihood of rejecting referrals from all sources. Conversely, stronger support was associated with higher willingness to be involved in capital cases generally, regardless of referral source. The findings raise the specter of skewed evaluator involvement in capital evaluations, where evaluators willing to do capital casework may have stronger capital punishment support than evaluators who opt out, and evaluators with strong opposition may work selectively for the defense. The results may provide a partial explanation for the "allegiance effect" in adversarial legal settings such that preexisting attitudes may contribute to partisan participation through a self-selection process.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4849669?pdf=render
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