A) It makes the witness more confident but only if their recollection is accurate.
B) It makes the witness more likely to make mistakes during actual testimony.
C) It makes the witness more confident even when they are inaccurate.
D) It makes the witness more likely to forget the smaller details of the incident they observed.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) faces of another race.
B) faces of another gender.
C) faces from the same race.
D) faces from the same gender.
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Multiple Choice
A) flashbulb memory.
B) state-dependent memory.
C) the serial position effect.
D) the misinformation effect.
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Multiple Choice
A) by females than by males.
B) if he or she has good communication skills.
C) if he or she appears similar to the one who judges.
D) if there was a bystander who watched and did not intervene.
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Multiple Choice
A) jurors exert normative pressure.
B) jurors share information.
C) deliberation does not cancel out certain biases.
D) deliberation can draw attention away from jurors' previous prejudgments of the evidence.
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Multiple Choice
A) after a long deliberation
B) confidently
C) in less than 10-12 seconds
D) and then changed them
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Multiple Choice
A) change blindness
B) misinformation effect
C) cognitive dissonance
D) imagination inflation
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Multiple Choice
A) it is more likely that he can also correctly identify the murderer.
B) it is less likely that he can also correctly identify the murderer.
C) nothing in terms of his ability to correctly identify the murderer.
D) it is more likely that he can also correctly identify the murderer, provided Mr. Caldwell is also highly educated.
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Multiple Choice
A) more convinced that the defendant was guilty.
B) more convinced that the evidence was insufficient to convict.
C) evenly split, with some convinced that he was guilty and others convinced that he was innocent.
D) split, with the minority favoring acquittal and the majority favoring conviction.
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Multiple Choice
A) gained information about these details by a second visit to the crime scene.
B) was paying better attention than one who recalls no details.
C) was not paying attention to the culprit or the crime itself.
D) is no more accurate in recalling important information than witnesses with no memory for details.
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Multiple Choice
A) give misleading testimony in court.
B) receive wrong information about an event and then incorporate that information into their memory of the event.
C) purposely give wrong information to police.
D) fail to remember any information following a traumatic event.
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Multiple Choice
A) interrogators delay the interview at least one week.
B) the witnesses scan a group of mug shots or a composite drawing before reviewing a lineup.
C) they are presented with a sequence of individual people, one by one, instead of being presented with a group of photos or a lineup.
D) the seriousness of the crime is highlighted.
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Multiple Choice
A) inadmissible rape testimony
B) rape denial
C) rape shield
D) no
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Multiple Choice
A) racially charged cases.
B) rape and battered woman cases.
C) personal injury awards in suits against businesses.
D) murder cases.
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Multiple Choice
A) Put the eyewitness on the stand, since even a discredited eyewitness is more convincing than no eyewitness at all.
B) Do not put the eyewitness on the stand, since a discredited eyewitness is worse than no eyewitness at all.
C) Put the eyewitness on the stand but admit your reservations about the credibility of the eyewitness before the defense attorney raises the issue.
D) Put the eyewitness on the stand only if he or she is attractive and similar to the jurors.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) wait until jurors have heard the testimony before ruling it inadmissible, so jurors specifically know what they are to disregard.
B) videotape the testimony and cut out the inadmissible parts.
C) meet with jurors during their deliberations after the trial to insure that inadmissible testimony is not influencing their judgments.
D) immediately follow the trial by seeking a verbal pledge from each juror to ignore inadmissible evidence.
Correct Answer
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