SEARCH
🇬🇧
MEM
O
RY
.COM
4.37.48
Guest
Log In
Â
Homepage
0
0
0
0
0
Create Course
Courses
Last Played
Dashboard
Notifications
Classrooms
Folders
Exams
Custom Exams
Help
Leaderboard
Shop
Awards
Forum
Friends
Subjects
Dark mode
User ID: 999999
Version: 4.37.48
www.memory.com
You are in browse mode. You must login to use
MEM
O
RY
  Log in to start
Index
 »Â
Law and psychology
 »Â
Chapter 1
 »Â
Level 1
level: Level 1
Questions and Answers List
level questions: Level 1
Question
Answer
participants under ... more likely to misconstrue events
high stress
biased instructions make participants feel they have to make a decision, leading to ....
mis identifications
simultaneous photo lineups more liable to mis identification then ....
sequential
familiarity induced bias
identifying someone you have seen in another context
police administrators being informed produced more false identifications, this is because they may implicitly put ... on participants
pressure
reid technique of interrogation relies on ... but research has found humans to be poor ...
reading body language; social judges
people calculate rewards and punishments in terms of immediate needs, this may be why people may confess to a crime to a harassing interrogator, because it...
alleviates stress
internalisation
sometimes people may believe they committed a crime that they did not commit
juries often do not appreciate the ... factors of confessions
situational
the PEACE model is followed outside ...
North America
trial lawyers selectively chose who they want on their juries due to perceived psychological variables belonging to certain population. This can lead to ....
racial exclusion
scientific jury selection
Using interviews to find a balanced jury group based on demographic and attitude variables
people are much more likely to vote ... when exposed to information from mainstream media
guilty
inadmissible information can ...
influence juries
whatever the majority vote is at the start of jury deliberation, is usually the end decision. True or false?
true
when majority rules are made more lenient, people spend less time ... and are more interested in acquiring the required votes, sometimes leading to ....
deliberating; bullying tactics
judges final sentences are susceptible to the ... bias
anchoring
if a white defendant closely resembled a black person, they were more likely to receive the ...
death penalty
decision control
people want to influence the final decision
process control
people want to have their say
people prefer the adversarial model over the inquisitorial model as it allows them more ... and ....
decision control; process control