[HTML][HTML] The possible impact of stress on forensic decision-making: An exploratory study
MA Almazrouei, IE Dror, RM Morgan - Forensic Science International: Mind …, 2023 - Elsevier
MA Almazrouei, IE Dror, RM Morgan
Forensic Science International: Mind and Law, 2023•ElsevierStress has been shown to have an impact on the quality of decisions made by professionals
in a variety of domains. However, there is lack of research examining the impact of stress on
forensic decision-making contexts, where experts can face various levels of stress. This
exploratory study examines fingerprint decisions made under stress, by novices (N= 115)
and fingerprint experts (N= 34). Findings suggested a potentially complex relationship
between stress and expert performance. On the one hand, in this study stress seemed to …
in a variety of domains. However, there is lack of research examining the impact of stress on
forensic decision-making contexts, where experts can face various levels of stress. This
exploratory study examines fingerprint decisions made under stress, by novices (N= 115)
and fingerprint experts (N= 34). Findings suggested a potentially complex relationship
between stress and expert performance. On the one hand, in this study stress seemed to …
Abstract
Stress has been shown to have an impact on the quality of decisions made by professionals in a variety of domains. However, there is lack of research examining the impact of stress on forensic decision-making contexts, where experts can face various levels of stress. This exploratory study examines fingerprint decisions made under stress, by novices (N = 115) and fingerprint experts (N = 34). Findings suggested a potentially complex relationship between stress and expert performance. On the one hand, in this study stress seemed to improve the performance of both novices and experts on fingerprint assessments, but mainly for same-source evidence. In contrast, the induced stress appeared to have an impact on risk-taking. When the same-source prints were difficult, a trend emerged with stressed experts taking less risk and reported more inconclusive conclusions with higher confidence than the control group. Furthermore, stress had a significant impact on the overall confidence levels and response times of novices, but not experts. These findings suggest that stress and decision-making tasks are important factors that should be considered when considering optimal working environments for increasing decision quality.
Elsevier
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