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  1. KEEP
  2. Faculty and Staff
  3. Neal, Tess
  4. The Cognitive and Social Psychological Bases of Bias in Forensic Mental Health Judgments
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The Cognitive and Social Psychological Bases of Bias in Forensic Mental Health Judgments

Full metadata

Description

This chapter integrates from cognitive neuroscience, cognitive psychology, and social psychology the basic science of bias in human judgment as relevant to judgments and decisions by forensic mental health professionals. Forensic mental health professionals help courts make decisions in cases when some question of psychology pertains to the legal issue, such as in insanity cases, child custody hearings, and psychological injuries in civil suits. The legal system itself and many people involved, such as jurors, assume mental health experts are “objective” and untainted by bias. However, basic psychological science from several branches of the discipline suggest the law’s assumption about experts’ protection from bias is wrong. Indeed, several empirical studies now show clear evidence of (unintentional) bias in forensic mental health experts’ judgments and decisions. In this chapter, we explain the science of how and why human judgments are susceptible to various kinds of bias. We describe dual-process theories from cognitive neuroscience, cognitive psychology, and social psychology that can help explain these biases. We review the empirical evidence to date specifically about cognitive and social psychological biases in forensic mental health judgments, weaving in related literature about biases in other types of expert judgment, with hypotheses about how forensic experts are likely affected by these biases. We close with a discussion of directions for future research and practice.

Date Created
2017-04-30
Contributors
  • Neal, Tess M.S. (Author)
  • Hight, Morgan (Author)
  • Howatt, Brian C. (Author)
  • Hamza, Cassandra (Author)
Topical Subject
  • judgment
  • decision
  • Bias
  • forensic
  • dual process
  • cognitive
  • Social
  • heuristic
  • implicit
Resource Type
Text
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Neal, Tess
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Series
Advances in Psychology and Law
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44526
Preferred Citation

Neal, T.M.S., Hight, M., Howatt, B.C., & Hamza, C. (in press). The cognitive and social psychological bases of bias in forensic mental health judgments. In M.K. Miller & B.H. Bornstein (Eds). Advances in Psychology and Law: Volume 3. New York: Springer.

Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Note
This copy of the chapter is the initial draft. It has not been through the editorial process yet.
System Created
  • 2017-06-14 06:40:14
System Modified
  • 2021-07-04 03:01:37
  •     
  • 1 year 8 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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