Forensic Science

Cognitive Bias and Blindness: A Global Survey of Forensic Science Examiners

Original publication: Journal of Evidence Science
Publication Date: December 2018
Author: Jeff Kukucka, Saul M. Kassin, Patricia A. Zapf, Itiel Dror
Translator: Jinxi Wang

Article Abstract: Exposure to irrelevant contextual information prompts confirmation-biased judgments of forensic science evidence(Kassin, Dror, &Kukucka, 2013). Nevertheless, some forensic examiners appear to believe that blind testing is unnecessary. To assess forensic examiners’ beliefs about the scope and nature of cognitive bias, we surveyed 403 experienced examiners from 21 countries. Overall, examiners regarded their judgments as nearly infallible and showed only a limited understanding and appreciation of cognitive bias. Most examiners believed they are immune to bias or can reduce bias through mere willpower, and fewer than half supported blind testing. Furthermore, many examiners showed a bias blind spot(Pronin, Lin, & Ross, 2002), acknowledging bias in other domains but not their own, and in other examiners but not themselves. These findings underscore the necessity of procedural reforms that blind forensic examiners to potentially biasing information, as is commonplace in other branches of science.

Evidence Science

Snapshot of the over of Evidence Science with highlighted articles from USALI’s Visiting Scholars

Snapshot of the over of Evidence Science with highlighted articles from USALI’s Visiting Scholars

The December 2018 issue of Evidence Science included several articles by former Visiting Scholars, including Weijing Huang, Jie Meng, Jinxi Wang, Xiaoyu Sun, Kuibun Zhu, and Yuejun Lan. Additionally, a translation from USALI staff Chao Liu and Yuan Gao was included in the publication.

Table of Contents

(Original Chinese language Table of Contents listed below)

Empirical Study of Police Fabricated Evidence in Wrongful Convictions in the U.S. by Weijing Huang

Induce or Prevent False Confession – A Study on Reid Interrogation Technique in the U.S. by Jie Meng

Cognitive Bias and Blindness: A Global Survey of Forensic Science Examiners by Jeff Kukucka, Saul M. Kassin, Patricia A. Zapf, Itiel Dror, Translated by Jinxi Wang

A Preliminary Study of the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission by Xiaoyu Sun

Police Induced False Confessions: Risk Factors and Prevention Recommendations by Saul M.Kassin, Steven A.Drizin, Thomas Grisso, Gisli H.Gudjonsson, Richard A.Leo, Allison D.Redlich, Translated by Chao Liu, Yuan Gao

Use Evidence Collected by the Supervision Agencies in Criminal Litigation by Yuejun Lan

Road-map for Application of Interrogation Recording in “Trial Centered” Reform by Kuibin Zhu

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