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Guilt Assessment After Retracted Voluntary and Coerced-Compliant Confessions in Combination with Exculpatory or Ambiguous Evidence

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DataCite Commons2025-07-03 更新2025-04-09 收录
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https://dataverse.nl/citation?persistentId=doi:10.34894/II908V
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We investigated how voluntary confessions, coerced-compliant confessions, and no-confessions influenced guilt assessments in combination with other exculpatory or ambiguous evidence. In three experiments (total N = 808), participants studied case information and provided guilt assessments. As expected, in Experiment 1 and 2a, i) voluntary confessions to protect a family member elicited stronger guilt attributions than no-confessions and ii) ambiguous evidence led to stronger guilt attributions than exculpatory evidence. In Experiment 2b, voluntary confessions to protect a group-member (but not to protect a family-member) elicited stronger guilt attributions than no-confessions. Exculpatory eyewitness evidence elicited stronger guilt attributions than exculpatory DNA evidence and participants assigned more weight to exculpatory DNA than eyewitness evidence. Participants were able to discount coerced-compliant confessions when they received information about the interrogations (Experiments 2a/b), but did not consistently consider risk factors for (voluntary) false confessions outside the interrogation room when assessing guilt.
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DataverseNL
创建时间:
2023-01-09
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