Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA.
Behav Sci Law. 2013 Jul-Aug;31(4):411-28. doi: 10.1002/bsl.2073. Epub 2013 Jun 11.
Recent research with college undergraduate mock jurors suggests that how psychopathic they perceive a criminal defendant to be is a powerful predictor of whether they will support a death verdict in simulated capital murder trials. Perceived affective and interpersonal traits of psychopathy are especially predictive of support for capital punishment, with perceived remorselessness explaining a disproportionate amount of variance in these attitudes. The present study attempted to extend these findings with a more representative sample of community members called for jury duty (N = 304). Jurors reviewed a case vignette based on an actual capital murder trial, provided sentencing verdicts, and rated the defendant on several characteristics historically associated with the construct of psychopathy. Consistent with prior findings, remorselessness predicted death verdicts, as did the affective and interpersonal features of psychopathy - though the latter effect was more pronounced among jurors who were Caucasian and/or who described their political beliefs as moderate rather than conservative or liberal. Results are discussed in terms of the potentially stigmatizing effects of psychopathy evidence in capital cases.
最近对大学生模拟陪审员的研究表明,他们认为刑事被告有多精神病态,这是他们是否会支持模拟死刑案件中死刑判决的有力预测因素。精神病态的感知情感和人际特质尤其能预测对死刑的支持,而感知到的无情则解释了这些态度中不成比例的差异。本研究试图用更多代表性的社区成员样本(N=304)来扩展这些发现。陪审员审查了一个基于实际死刑审判的案例片段,提供了判决结果,并对被告的几个特征进行了评价,这些特征在历史上与精神病态的结构有关。与先前的发现一致,无情预测了死刑判决,而精神病态的情感和人际特征也是如此——尽管在后一种情况下,在白人和/或描述自己的政治信仰为温和而非保守或自由的陪审员中,这种影响更为明显。结果从精神病态证据在死刑案件中的潜在污名化影响方面进行了讨论。