JH Goldberg’s research while affiliated with The Ohio State University and other places

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Publications (1)


Rage and reason: the psychology of the intuitive prosecutor
  • Article

August 1999

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33 Reads

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247 Citations

European Journal of Social Psychology

JH Goldberg

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This study explores the conditions under which experimentally primed anger influences both attributions of responsibility and the processes by which people make such attributions. Drawing on social functional theory, it was hypothesized that people are best thought of as 'intuitive prosecutors' who lower their thresholds for making attributions of harmful intent and recommending harsh punishment when they both witness a serious transgression of societal norms and believe that the transgressor escaped punishment. The data support the hypotheses. Anger primed by a serious crime 'carried over' to influence judgments of unrelated acts of harm only wizen the perpetrator of the crime went unpunished, notwithstanding the arousal of equally intense anger in conditions in which the perpetrator appropriately punished or his fate was unknown. Participants in the perpetrator-unpunished condition also relied on simpler and more punitive attributional heuristics for inferring responsibility for harm. (C) 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Citations (1)


... For example, Fenimore and Jones (2023) found that crime severity was associated with greater anger and that anger mediated the effect of crime severity on endorsement of retributive justice. The intuitive prosecutor model (Goldberg et al. 1999) suggests that moral outrage, felt as anger, increases a juror's impulse to punish such that anger amplifies the importance of prosecutorial evidence (Nunez et al., 2015). Salerno (2021) suggests that a selective emotional response may occur due to characteristics of trial players (e.g., defendants, victims, and jurors). ...

Reference:

Gender, Generations, and Guilt: Defendant Gender and Age Affect Jurors’ Decisions and Perceptions in an Intimate Partner Homicide Trial
Rage and reason: the psychology of the intuitive prosecutor
  • Citing Article
  • August 1999

European Journal of Social Psychology