12: Law Flashcards
How is Psychology related to Law?
Studying the legal system helps psychologists see how behavior occurs in complex, personally relevant, and emotion-laden context.
-Eyewitness Testimony
-Confessions
-Jury Selection Making (Nonexistent in Ph)
-Posttrial: To Prison And Beyond
An expectation of something that affect a person’s behavior and leads to those expectations to become reality (person unknowingly causes a prediction to come true, due to the simple fact that he or she expects it to come true).
Self-fulfilling prophecy
The tendency to make dispositional attributions instead of situational attributions for other people’s behavior
Fundamental Attribution Error
Refers to the psychological processes of acquiring, storing, retaining, and later retrieving information.
Memory
the input of information into the memory system
Encoding
The retention of the encoded information
Storage
Process of getting the information out of memory and back into awareness
Retrieval
The tendency for the presence of a weapon to draw attention and impair a witness’s ability to identify the perpetrator.
Weapon focus effect
Tendency for people to be more accurate at recognizing members of their own racial group than of other groups; Witnesses have trouble recognizing members of a race other than their own.
Own race bias
The tendency for false post-event misinformation to become integrated into peoples memory of an event.
Misinformation effect
An eyewitnesses’ testimony about an event can be affected by how the questions put to the witnesses are worded.
a. Wording of questions
b. Lineup instructions
c. Mugshot-induced bias
d. Confidence malleability
e. Postevent information
Wording of questions
Police instructions can affect an eyewitnessess’ willingness to make an identification
a. Wording of questions
b. Lineup instructions
c. Mugshot-induced bias
d. Confidence malleability
e. Postevent information
Lineup instructions
Exposure to mugshots of a suspect increases the likelihood that the witness will later choose that suspect in a lineup
a. Wording of questions
b. Lineup instructions
c. Mugshot-induced bias
d. Confidence malleability
e. Postevent information
Mugshot-induced bias
An eyewitnessess’ confidence can be influenced by factors that are unrelated to identification accuracy
a. Wording of questions
b. Lineup instructions
c. Mugshot-induced bias
d. Confidence malleability
e. Postevent information
Confidence malleability
Eyewitness testimony about an event often reflects not only what they actually saw but information they obtained later on
a. Wording of questions
b. Lineup instructions
c. Mugshot-induced bias
d. Confidence malleability
e. Postevent information
Postevent information