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Which one of the following state-ments, if true, would most seriously undermine the author’s suggestion about the use of current psychologi-cal research in the courtroom?
All guidelines about human behavior must take account of variations in the patterns of human decision-making.
Current models of how humans make decisions apply reliably to individuals but do not hold for decisions made by groups.
The current conception of jury infe-rential error employed by judges has been in use for nearly a century.
Inferential errors can be more easily predicted in controlled situations such as the trial of lawsuits than in other kinds of decision-making processes.
- The passage discusses how juries may make errors in decision-making due to inherent flaws in human inference, suggesting psychologists’ research could help.
- Option 1: Variability in human behavior. This doesn't dispute the idea of using psychological patterns, as variability can still align with general patterns.
- Option 2: Models fit individuals, not groups. If this is true, then applying individual psychological models to jury (group) decisions would be ineffective.
- Option 3: The longevity of current practices. Simply being old doesn’t affect the validity of using new psychological insights.
- Option 4: Better prediction in trials. This supports the use of research in courtrooms, not contradicts it.
By: Munesh Kumari ProfileResourcesReport error
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