Forensic Animation: Hindsight Bias and Counterfactual Thinking in Judgments of Dynamically Unfolding Events

法医动画:动态展开事件判断中的后见之明偏见和反事实思维

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    0817674
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 21.37万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2008
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2008-08-01 至 2012-06-30
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

This project examines how legal decision-making is affected by new advances in the technology of evidence presentation. The project focuses specifically on the use of computer animated video scenes, in which crimes or accidents are "re-created" in cinematic style scene. In courtrooms across the nation, these "forensic animations" are used to explain and clarify complicated arrays of physical evidence. For example, in trials involving homicide or accidents, evidence collected from the scene may be used to inform a cinematic re-creation of what actually happened. Forensic animation can indeed be persuasive, because it may create a vivid sense of actually being there and witnessing first-hand the events in question. However, crime and accident reconstruction always contain inherent uncertainty that visually impressive animation may obscure. This research project uses the laboratory research tools of experimental social-cognitive psychology to understand the impact of forensic animation.Prior research conducted in the Principal Investigator's laboratory at the University of Illinois has established that forensic animation can backfire, in that it can increase the hindsight bias. A widely-studied cognitive error common to most people, the hindsight bias is the tendency to exaggerate the past predictability of once-future outcomes. That is, after learning the details of an outcome, people tend to believe that they "knew it along." The hindsight bias has been singled out as a particularly vexing problem in legal decision-making, in that it can make jurors unreasonably punitive. In cases involving liability, negligence, or malpractice, the onus under American law is to judge only in terms of what the accused knew at the time of the accident, not on the basis of information available only in hindsight. Thus, an understanding of the cognitive basis of hindsight bias may unlock new tools for improving the quality of legal decision-making. The current research project brings the latest laboratory techniques for studying, as well as mitigating, the hindsight bias to address concerns regarding the psychological impact of forensic animation.By taking into account aspects of the presentation of forensic animation in the courtroom setting (for example, number of repetitions, visual point of view, slow-motion versus normal speed of replay), this research can show under what circumstances hindsight bias is increased or decreased by forensic animation. In turn, these research findings may suggest new guidelines for the appropriate use of forensic animation in American courts of law.
这个项目研究了法律的决策是如何受到证据呈现技术的新进展的影响。该项目特别侧重于使用计算机动画视频场景,其中犯罪或事故被“重新创建”在电影风格的场景。在全国各地的法庭上,这些“法医动画”被用来解释和澄清复杂的物证阵列。例如,在涉及杀人或事故的审判中,从现场收集的证据可用于告知电影再现实际发生的事情。法医动画确实有说服力,因为它可以创造一种生动的感觉,让人身临其境,亲眼目睹有关事件。然而,犯罪和事故重建总是包含固有的不确定性,视觉上令人印象深刻的动画可能会掩盖这些不确定性。该研究项目使用实验社会认知心理学的实验室研究工具来了解法医动画的影响。伊利诺伊大学首席研究员实验室进行的先前研究已经确定,法医动画可能会适得其反,因为它会增加后见之明的偏见。后见之明偏见是一种被广泛研究的认知错误,大多数人都有,它倾向于夸大过去对未来结果的预测。也就是说,在了解了结果的细节后,人们倾向于相信他们“一直知道沿着。“后见之明偏见被挑出来作为法律的决策中一个特别令人烦恼的问题,因为它可以使陪审员不合理地惩罚。在涉及责任、疏忽或渎职的案件中,美国法律规定的责任是仅根据被告在事故发生时所知道的情况进行判断,而不是仅根据事后获得的信息进行判断。因此,对后见之明偏见的认知基础的理解可能会为提高法律的决策质量提供新的工具。目前的研究项目带来了最新的实验室技术,用于研究,以及减轻,后见之明偏见,以解决有关法医动画的心理影响的关注。(例如,重复次数、视觉视角、慢动作与正常重放速度),本研究可显示在何种情况下,法医动画会增加或减少事后之明偏见。反过来,这些研究结果可能会建议在美国法庭上适当使用法医动画的新准则。

项目成果

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Neal Roese其他文献

Neal Roese的其他文献

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{{ truncateString('Neal Roese', 18)}}的其他基金

Forensic Animation: Hindsight Bias and Counterfactual Thinking in Judgments of Dynamically Unfolding Events
法医动画:动态展开事件判断中的后见之明偏见和反事实思维
  • 批准号:
    1241160
  • 财政年份:
    2011
  • 资助金额:
    $ 21.37万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant

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