Evaluation and recall of evidence: Authoritarianism and the Patty Hearst case |
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Authors: | Luis Garcia William Griffitt |
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Affiliation: | Kansas State University USA |
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Abstract: | By using the Patricia Hearst case as the stimulus material, two experiments were conducted to examine the relationship between authoritarianism and recall of evidence. In Experiment I it was found that high authoritarians recall more prosecution evidence than defense evidence. This was not the case for the low authoritarians. Results concerning the hypothesis that high authoritarians would recall more character information than low authoritarians were equivocal. In Experiment II a trend indicating that high authoritarians draw more direct inferences from incriminating evidence than do low authoritarians or an attorney was obtained. The results are discussed in terms of previous findings, authoritarian theory, and characteristics of the Patricia Hearst case. |
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Keywords: | Address reprint requests to William Griffitt Department of Psychology Kansas State University Manhattan KS 66506. |
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