Interpretation of a Crisis Call: Persistence of a primed perception of a disputed utterance

Authors

  • Helen Fraser Independent Researcher
  • Bruce Stevenson University of New England
  • Tony Marks University of New England

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsll.v18i2.261

Keywords:

forensic transcription, disputed utterance, cognitive phonetics, priming

Abstract

This article describes an experiment designed to explore the effects of ‘priming’ (i.e. being exposed to a suggested interpretation of an audio signal) on how juries perceive disputed utterances in poor quality recordings used as evidence in legal cases. Using the actual disputed utterance from a real case, the experiment tracks how participants’ perception of its content changes as evidence about the case is gradually revealed to them. At a certain point, participants are randomly divided into two groups, each receiving parallel but slightly different evidence. Results indicate the dangers of priming may be considerably greater than is sometimes recognised, and unlikely to be overcome by a mere caution from the judge. They also indicate that participants’ propensity to consider the defendant guilty may be based on judgements of his trustworthiness influenced by initial impressions of his style of speech, rather than on objective evidence presented to them.

Author Biographies

  • Helen Fraser, Independent Researcher
    Helen Fraser studied linguistics and phonetics at Macquarie University, Sydney, and the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and taught at the University of New England, Australia, from 1990 to 2008. She is now an independent researcher, focussing on cognitive aspects of phonetics and phonology, and covering both theoretical and applied topics, especially second language pronunciation and forensic transcription.
  • Bruce Stevenson, University of New England
    Bruce Stevenson is a Lecturer in Cognitive Psychology at the University of New England, Australia, with research interests in language processing and working memory.
  • Tony Marks, University of New England
    Tony Marks is a Senior Lecturer in Psychology and First-year Coordinator at the University of New England, Australia. His research background includes the misinformation effect in human memory and the impact of dual-process theories of cognition in applied social psychological contexts.

Published

2011-11-30

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Fraser, H., Stevenson, B., & Marks, T. (2011). Interpretation of a Crisis Call: Persistence of a primed perception of a disputed utterance. International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law, 18(2), 261-292. https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsll.v18i2.261