AI Article Synopsis

  • The research investigates how jury deliberations affect jurors' memories, focusing on two main phenomena: Within-Individual and Socially Shared Retrieval-Induced Forgetting (WI-RIF and SS-RIF).
  • Findings showed no evidence of forgetting but indicated some facilitation in memory recall, suggesting that discussing evidence can help improve memory rather than hinder it.
  • The study raises questions about how the structure of deliberations and jurors' goals might influence memory processes and highlights the need for future research to better understand the impact of juror discussions on decision-making.

Article Abstract

The jury is a defining component of the American criminal justice system, and the courts largely assume that the collaborative nature of jury deliberations will enhance jurors' memory for important trial information. However, research suggests that this kind of collaboration, although sometimes improving memory, can also lead to incomplete and inaccurate "collective" memories. The present research examines whether jury deliberations, where individuals collaboratively recall and discuss trial evidence to render unanimous verdicts, might shape jurors' memories through the robust phenomena of Within-Individual and Socially Shared Retrieval-Induced Forgetting (WI-RIF and SS-RIF, respectively). The results revealed no WI-RIF or SS-RIF. However, we did find evidence in the direction of Within-Individual and Socially-shared Retrieval Induced Facilitation (WI-RIFA and SS-RIFA, respectively) in speakers' and listeners' narrative and open-ended recall of evidentiary details. The present results are discussed in terms of whether jurors' goals during deliberation and the deliberation structure (e.g., six or more discussants) protect against forgetting, or whether possible methodological issues (e.g., the vast amount of information presented) eliminated WI-RIF and SS-RIF and, in turn, make drawing conclusions surrounding the mnemonic impact of jury deliberation difficult. Regardless, the present results suggest jury deliberations are quite limited in terms of how much evidence is actually discussed compared to the total of what could be discussed, and our methodology provides an ecologically valid baseline for future research to better understand the mnemonic consequences associated with jury deliberations and, in turn, jury decision making.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tops.12435DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

jury deliberations
16
wi-rif ss-rif
12
mnemonic consequences
8
jury
7
jurors'
4
consequences jurors'
4
jurors' selective
4
selective retrieval
4
deliberation
4
retrieval deliberation
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!