A) group polarization.
B) minority influence.
C) deindividuation.
D) informational influence.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) favors conviction.
B) favors acquittal.
C) is composed of women.
D) is composed of Whites.
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
Answered by ExamLex AI
View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) making the witness give a "yes" or "no" judgment in response to a sequence of suspects.
B) letting the witness view suspects one at a time.
C) using questions that are spontaneous, not scripted.
D) prohibiting any confidence-inflating post-lineup comments.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) consistent.
B) self-confident.
C) persistent.
D) well-educated.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Jurors find confident eyewitnesses the least believable though they are often correct.
B) Eyewitnesses who remember many details are more accurate than those who don't.
C) Jurors are relatively skilled in distinguishing between accurate and inaccurate eyewitnesses.
D) The majority of convicted individuals later exonerated were victims of mistaken eyewitnesses.
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
Answered by ExamLex AI
View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) status
B) attractiveness
C) similarity to the jurors
D) all of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) being the only person who saw the event
B) being asked the same question repeatedly
C) testifying against a person whose race is different from his or her own
D) disliking the defendant
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) An eyewitness's testimony about an event cannot be affected by how the questions about the event are worded.
B) Police instructions can affect an eyewitness's willingness to make an identification.
C) An eyewitness's perception and memory of an event may be impacted by his/her expectations.
D) Eye witnesses are more accurate when identifying members of their own race than members of other races.
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
Answered by ExamLex AI
View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) States with the death penalty have lower homicide rates.
B) Homicide rates drop when states initiate the death penalty.
C) When committing a crime of passion, most people pause to calculate the consequences.
D) The death penalty is applied consistently in all states.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) suggestive questions
B) an eyewitness's own retelling of events
C) police officers' response to witness statements
D) all of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) jurors are generally able to follow the judge's instructions.
B) jurors have a hard time ignoring the evidence and its influence on their deliberations.
C) jurors do so if the evidence damages the defendant's case but not if it hurts the prosecution's case.
D) the evidence typically becomes the focus of debate in jury deliberations.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) are better at remembering verbal details than visual details.
B) can reliably separate real from false memories.
C) are especially susceptible to misinformation.
D) do not react to misinformation.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) ruled that death-qualified jurors are a biased sample.
B) overturned a lower court ruling that death-qualified jurors are a biased sample.
C) ruled that Georgia's five-member juries were as reliable and accurate as twelve-member juries.
D) overturned a lower court decision that six-member juries could decide cases involving the death penalty.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) he should make the jury aware of the witness's ability to remember trivial details.
B) he should deliberately avoid making the jury aware of the witness's ability to remember trivial details.
C) it will make no difference whether the jury knows that the witness can remember trivial details.
D) he should make the jury aware of the witness's ability to remember trivial details only if the jury is composed of all males.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Eyewitnesses are often more correct than confident.
B) Confident eyewitnesses are less accurate when making identifications soon after the event.
C) A confident witness is not necessarily an accurate witness.
D) Eyewitnesses who pay attention to details are most likely to pay attention to the culprit's face.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Studies have confirmed that eyewitnesses often are more confident than correct.
B) Confident witnesses are more believable to jurors than those lacking confidence.
C) Younger eyewitnesses tend to be more accurate than older eyewitnesses.
D) Criminal cases lacking eyewitness testimony are more likely to produce convictions.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) about half the jurors switched their votes from guilty to innocent.
B) the majority of jurors still voted for conviction.
C) jurors regarded the eyewitness testimony as useless and it had no impact on their verdict.
D) a boomerang effect occurred with all the jurors changing their votes in favor of an acquittal.
Correct Answer
verified
Showing 61 - 80 of 116
Related Exams