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The impact of legal expertise on moral decision-making biases

Psychology

The impact of legal expertise on moral decision-making biases

S. Baez, M. Patiño-sáenz, et al.

This intriguing study by Sandra Baez and colleagues explores how legal expertise influences moral biases in decision-making. By comparing criminal judges, attorneys, and control groups, the researchers found that legal professionals are less swayed by language and emotional states when assessing harm, indicating a fascinating mitigation of biases in moral judgment.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Traditional and mainstream legal frameworks conceive law primarily as a purely rational practice, free from affect or intuition. However, substantial evidence indicates that human decision-making depends upon diverse biases. We explored the manifestation of these biases through comparisons among 45 criminal judges, 60 criminal attorneys, and 64 controls. We examined whether these groups' decision-making patterns were influenced by (a) the information on the transgressor's mental state, (b) the use of gruesome language in harm descriptions, and (c) ongoing physiological states. Judges and attorneys were similar to controls in that they overestimated the damage caused by intentional harm relative to accidental harm. However, judges and attorneys were less biased towards punishments and harm severity ratings to accidental harms. Similarly, they were less influenced in their decisions by either language manipulations or physiological arousal. Our findings suggest that specific expertise developed in legal settings can attenuate some pervasive biases in moral decision processes.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 23, 2020
Authors
Sandra Baez, Michel Patiño-Sáenz, Jorge Martínez-Cotrina, Diego Mauricio Aponte, Juan Carlos Caicedo, Hernando Santamaría-García, Daniel Pastor, María Luz González-Gadea, Martín Haissiner, Adolfo M. García, Agustín Ibáñez
Tags
legal expertise
moral decision-making
biases
criminal judges
criminal attorneys
accidental harm
punishment
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