Leiden University, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Leiden, Netherlands.
Rutgers University, School of Criminal Justice, Newark, New Jersey, USA.
Behav Sci Law. 2022 Nov;40(6):787-817. doi: 10.1002/bsl.2588. Epub 2022 Aug 17.
This study examines how formal education in biological and behavioral sciences may impact punishment intuitions (views on criminal sentencing, free will, responsibility, and dangerousness) in cases involving neurobiological evidence. In a survey experiment, we compared intuitions between biobehavioral science and non-science university graduates by presenting them with a baseline case without a neurobiological explanation for offending followed by one of two cases with a neurobiological explanation (described as either innate or acquired biological influences to offending). An ordinal logistic regression indicated that both science and non-science graduates selected significantly more severe punishments for the baseline case as compared to when an innate neurobiological explanation for offending was provided. However, across all cases, science graduates selected significantly less severe sentences than non-science graduates, and only science graduates' decisions were mediated by free will and responsibility attributions. Findings are discussed in relation to scientific understandings of behavior, the impact of science education on attitudes towards punishment, and potential criminal-legal implications.
这项研究考察了正规的生物和行为科学教育如何影响涉及神经生物学证据的案件中的惩罚直觉(对刑事判决、自由意志、责任和危险性的看法)。在一项调查实验中,我们通过向生物行为科学和非科学专业的大学毕业生呈现一个没有神经生物学解释的基本案例,然后呈现两个具有神经生物学解释的案例(分别描述为犯罪的先天或后天生物学影响),比较了他们的直觉。有序逻辑回归表明,与提供犯罪的先天神经生物学解释相比,科学和非科学专业的毕业生对基本案例的选择明显更严厉。然而,在所有案例中,科学专业的毕业生选择的判决都明显比非科学专业的毕业生轻,只有科学专业的毕业生的决定受到自由意志和责任归因的影响。研究结果与行为的科学理解、科学教育对惩罚态度的影响以及潜在的刑法含义有关。