Science of Justice
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2235471/fan_mail/new] What if the most important decision in your case was made before opening statements even began? Jurors do not enter the courtroom as blank slates. They arrive with beliefs about personal responsibility, corporations, doctors, lawsuits, and money that shape how they interpret every witness, document, and argument they hear. In this episode, we explore the hidden psychological filters that influence juror decision-making and why facts alone are rarely enough to change a mind. The key takeaway: effective trial teams prepare for the beliefs already sitting in the jury box, not the ones they wish were there. In This Episode * Why jurors begin forming opinions before a lawyer says a word * How personal experiences shape the meaning jurors assign to evidence * The difference between demographics and the beliefs that actually drive decisions * Why silent skepticism is one of the biggest risks in voir dire * How defensive attribution and victim-blaming influence liability and damages * Why witness credibility depends as much on perception as facts * How plaintiff trial teams can uncover hidden resistance before trial and adapt their strategy accordingly https://scienceofjustice.com/ @JuryAnalyst
49 episodios
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