Exam 18: Social Psychology and the Law
Exam 1: An Invitation to Social Psychology60 Questions
Exam 2: The Methods of Social Psychology60 Questions
Exam 3: The Social Self60 Questions
Exam 4: Social Cognition: Thinking About People and Situations60 Questions
Exam 5: Social Attribution: Explaining Behavior60 Questions
Exam 6: Emotion60 Questions
Exam 7: Attitudes, Behavior, and Rationalization60 Questions
Exam 8: Persuasion60 Questions
Exam 9: Social Influence60 Questions
Exam 10: Relationships and Attraction60 Questions
Exam 11: Stereotyping, Prejudice, and Discrimination60 Questions
Exam 12: Groups60 Questions
Exam 13: Aggression60 Questions
Exam 14: Altruism and Cooperation60 Questions
Exam 15: Social Psychology and Health20 Questions
Exam 16: Social Psychology and Personal Finance20 Questions
Exam 17: Social Psychology and Education20 Questions
Exam 18: Social Psychology and the Law20 Questions
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Psychological research indicates that death-qualified jurors are
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
Jason has undergone death qualification and is now serving on a jury, whereas David was excluded from the jury because he was unwilling to vote for the death penalty.Jason is probably more concerned about crime in general, and more likely to find the suspect guilty, than David.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
Research conducted by Hastie, Penrod, and Pennington tested whether juries deliberated cases differently based on whether they had to reach a unanimous decision or a majority decision.What did this research show?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
The textbook describes research conducted by Loftus and colleagues in which participants were shown pictures of an automobile accident and were asked questions about the pictures.Some participants were asked questions that were consistent with what they actually saw, but some participants were asked misleading questions.Which of the following best describes the results of this research?
(Multiple Choice)
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The goal of the _____________ motive is to punish the deed that was committed; the goal of the _________________ motive is to prevent future crimes.
(Multiple Choice)
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Eyewitness errors have been found to be involved in more than _____________ of cases of wrongful convictions.
(Multiple Choice)
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People who are given harsher punishments are more likely to feel that the criminal justice system is unfair and give lower ratings of procedural justice.
(True/False)
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Damages that represent the amount the plaintiff should receive to cover any loss or harm sustained are called ______________ damages, whereas damages that are intended to deter the defendant from being negligent in the future are called _______________ damages.
(Multiple Choice)
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Research has shown that merely hearing the questions typically asked in the death-qualification part of jury selection tends to bias potential jurors toward conviction, because
(Multiple Choice)
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The portion of a trial in U.S.courts in which potential jurors are questioned and a jury is selected is known as
(Multiple Choice)
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In cases in which defendants are convicted and later proved innocent by DNA tests, as many as ________________ had falsely confessed to the crime.
(Multiple Choice)
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Loftus and Pickrell persuaded the family members of college students to tell stories about when their student relative was five years old, including one "story" that was actually fake and never really happened.How did the students respond?
(Multiple Choice)
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Sheila, an attorney, worries that she will be unable to pick good jurors.Instead, she hires a specialist to conduct surveys and compile statistics on what demographic qualities of jurors might predict support for her client.Sheila is using ________________ to pick her jury.
(Multiple Choice)
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The social psychologist Tom Tyler identified three factors that shape our sense of procedural justice.Which of the following is NOT one of those three factors?
(Multiple Choice)
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People's assessments of the fairness of processes leading to legal outcomes are called
(Multiple Choice)
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Social scientists have differentiated two motives that determine preferences for different kinds of punishment.These motives are:
(Multiple Choice)
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Most jurors are accurate at recognizing whether a confession is real or fake.
(True/False)
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Accurate eyewitnesses are generally more confident than inaccurate ones.
(True/False)
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Research shows that jurors make decisions about awarding punitive damages by first consulting their sense of outrage over what happened.
(True/False)
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We should be careful about always trusting eyewitness accounts, because memory is
(Multiple Choice)
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