Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.

To investigate dual-process persuasion theories in the context of group decision making, we studied low and high need-for-cognition (NFC) participants within a mock trial study. Participants considered plaintiff and defense expert scientific testimony that varied in argument strength. All participan...

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Main Authors: Jessica M Salerno, Bette L Bottoms, Liana C Peter-Hagene
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5606931?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-da5795bea2f7409ba52baf06d6835c5f2020-11-25T00:24:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018358010.1371/journal.pone.0183580Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.Jessica M SalernoBette L BottomsLiana C Peter-HageneTo investigate dual-process persuasion theories in the context of group decision making, we studied low and high need-for-cognition (NFC) participants within a mock trial study. Participants considered plaintiff and defense expert scientific testimony that varied in argument strength. All participants heard a cross-examination of the experts focusing on peripheral information (e.g., credentials) about the expert, but half were randomly assigned to also hear central information highlighting flaws in the expert's message (e.g., quality of the research presented by the expert). Participants rendered pre- and post-group-deliberation verdicts, which were considered "scientifically accurate" if the verdicts reflected the strong (versus weak) expert message, and "scientifically inaccurate" if they reflected the weak (versus strong) expert message. For individual participants, we replicated studies testing classic persuasion theories: Factors promoting reliance on central information (i.e., central cross-examination, high NFC) improved verdict accuracy because they sensitized individual participants to the quality discrepancy between the experts' messages. Interestingly, however, at the group level, the more that scientifically accurate mock jurors discussed peripheral (versus central) information about the experts, the more likely their group was to reach the scientifically accurate verdict. When participants were arguing for the scientifically accurate verdict consistent with the strong expert message, peripheral comments increased their persuasiveness, which made the group more likely to reach the more scientifically accurate verdict.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5606931?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica M Salerno
Bette L Bottoms
Liana C Peter-Hagene
spellingShingle Jessica M Salerno
Bette L Bottoms
Liana C Peter-Hagene
Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jessica M Salerno
Bette L Bottoms
Liana C Peter-Hagene
author_sort Jessica M Salerno
title Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
title_short Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
title_full Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
title_fullStr Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
title_full_unstemmed Individual versus group decision making: Jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
title_sort individual versus group decision making: jurors' reliance on central and peripheral information to evaluate expert testimony.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description To investigate dual-process persuasion theories in the context of group decision making, we studied low and high need-for-cognition (NFC) participants within a mock trial study. Participants considered plaintiff and defense expert scientific testimony that varied in argument strength. All participants heard a cross-examination of the experts focusing on peripheral information (e.g., credentials) about the expert, but half were randomly assigned to also hear central information highlighting flaws in the expert's message (e.g., quality of the research presented by the expert). Participants rendered pre- and post-group-deliberation verdicts, which were considered "scientifically accurate" if the verdicts reflected the strong (versus weak) expert message, and "scientifically inaccurate" if they reflected the weak (versus strong) expert message. For individual participants, we replicated studies testing classic persuasion theories: Factors promoting reliance on central information (i.e., central cross-examination, high NFC) improved verdict accuracy because they sensitized individual participants to the quality discrepancy between the experts' messages. Interestingly, however, at the group level, the more that scientifically accurate mock jurors discussed peripheral (versus central) information about the experts, the more likely their group was to reach the scientifically accurate verdict. When participants were arguing for the scientifically accurate verdict consistent with the strong expert message, peripheral comments increased their persuasiveness, which made the group more likely to reach the more scientifically accurate verdict.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5606931?pdf=render
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