原告/被告性别和性侵犯形式对陪审员的原型认知和判决的作用。

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Journal of Interpersonal Violence Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-19 DOI:10.1177/08862605241253025
Cassandra Starosta, Evelyn Maeder, Craig Leth-Steenson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们试图测试性侵犯形式和原告/被告性别对陪审员对性侵犯案件、原告和被告的原型性的看法的影响。我们研究了这些感知的原型性测量是否能预测模拟陪审员对原告/被告的指责和可信度评估,以及这些评估是否能预测模拟性侵犯审判中的判决决定。我们预测女原告-男被告条件、阴道性交条件及其组合比其对应条件更具有原型性,这将预测过失/可信度评估,最终预测判决结果。通过多产学术招募的模拟陪审员(N = 437)阅读了一份涉及被指控的性侵犯(强迫对申诉人进行口交或阴道性行为)的审判记录,其中涉及一名女性原告-男性被告或一名男性原告-女性被告。他们提供了一个判决并评估了案件/申诉人/被告的感知原型性,为申诉人/被告提供了指责/可信度评估,并回答了强奸神话问卷。性侵犯形式对我们的结果没有显著影响。模拟陪审员认为男原告-女被告条件比女原告-男被告条件更不符合性侵犯案件/原告/被告的原型,导致对原告的负面评价,对被告的正面评价,并降低了定罪的可能性。同时,在固定的原型性水平下,女性原告获得更多的负面评价,而男性被告获得更多的正面评价,这降低了定罪的概率;模拟陪审员对强奸神话的接受缓和了这种影响。在涉及女性投诉人的案件中,强奸神话可以预测决策,而在涉及男性投诉人的案件中,男性强奸神话可以预测决策。研究结果表明,原型性是性侵犯审判中模拟陪审员决策的一种机制,并阐明了原型和强奸神话对陪审员决策的独特作用,对心理学和刑事司法系统具有实际意义。
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The Role of Complainant/Defendant Gender and Form of Sexual Assault on Jurors' Perceptions of Prototypicality and Verdicts.

We sought to test the effects of sexual assault form and complainant/defendant gender on jurors' perceptions of the prototypicality of a sexual assault case, complainant, and defendant. We examined whether these perceived prototypicality measures predict mock jurors' complainant/defendant blame and credibility assessments and if these assessments predict verdict decisions in a simulated sexual assault trial. We predicted that the female complainant-male defendant condition, vaginal intercourse condition, and their combination would be perceived as more prototypical than their counterparts, which would predict blame/credibility assessments, ultimately predicting verdict. Mock jurors (N = 437) recruited via Prolific Academic read a trial transcript involving an alleged sexual assault (oral or vaginal sex forced onto the complainant) with a female complainant-male defendant or a male complainant-female defendant. They provided a verdict and assessed the perceived prototypicality of the case/complainant/defendant, provided blame/credibility assessments for the complainant/defendant, and responded to rape myth questionnaires. Sexual assault form did not significantly affect any of our outcomes. Mock jurors perceived the male complainant-female defendant condition as less prototypical of a sexual assault case/complainant/defendant than the female complainant-male defendant condition, resulting in negative evaluations of the complainant, favorable evaluations of the defendant, and lowered probability of conviction. Simultaneously, for fixed levels of prototypicality, the female complainant received more negative evaluations, and the male defendant received more favorable evaluations, which lowered the probability of conviction; mock jurors' rape myth acceptance moderated this effect. Rape myths were predictive of decision-making in cases involving a female complainant, and male rape myths were predictive in cases involving a male complainant. Results demonstrate that prototypicality is a mechanism behind mock jurors' decisions in sexual assault trials and elucidate the distinctive role of prototypes and rape myths on juror decision-making, with practical implications for the field of psychology and the criminal legal system.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
12.00%
发文量
375
期刊介绍: The Journal of Interpersonal Violence is devoted to the study and treatment of victims and perpetrators of interpersonal violence. It provides a forum of discussion of the concerns and activities of professionals and researchers working in domestic violence, child sexual abuse, rape and sexual assault, physical child abuse, and violent crime. With its dual focus on victims and victimizers, the journal will publish material that addresses the causes, effects, treatment, and prevention of all types of violence. JIV only publishes reports on individual studies in which the scientific method is applied to the study of some aspect of interpersonal violence. Research may use qualitative or quantitative methods. JIV does not publish reviews of research, individual case studies, or the conceptual analysis of some aspect of interpersonal violence. Outcome data for program or intervention evaluations must include a comparison or control group.
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