Television Courtroom Broadcasting: Distraction Effects and Eye-tracking"Are witnesses, jurors or others distracted by television cameras in court? The distraction effects are unknown. The US Supreme Court also cites a lack of empirical effects research. This proof- of-concept study demonstrates for the first time that eye-tracking technology can now accurately determine whether courtroom participants look at the television cameras in the courtroom and for how long. In doing so, Television Courtroom Broadcasting: Distraction Effects and Eye-tracking opens the door to a new era of research of in-court distraction effects. Distraction can now be examined, recorded and verified. Eye-tracking technology provides a solution to one of the biggest courtroom broadcasting concerns as well as the problems of past research methods. Detailed images and drawings help to demonstrate the importance of researching camera-distraction, cones-of-vision, and camera-location-issues in the courtroom." (Book cover) |
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Table des matières
Empirical Effects Studies
| 19 |
Considering Distraction Effects Research
| 39 |
Effects and Courtroom ParticipantsActors
| 53 |
Distraction and General Research Studies
| 69 |
Legalpsychology and Eyetracking
| 87 |
The Eyetracking Distraction Solution
| 109 |
The First TCB Eyetracking Demonstration
| 127 |
The Judge
| 139 |
The Witness
| 147 |
The SolicitorBarristerLawyer
| 157 |
Location Issues | 165 |
Conclusion
| 189 |
Diagrams from Short Report Study
| 197 |
Bibliography
| 207 |
Back Cover
| 225 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
audience audience effects camera and camera camera operator present camera position Chandler cone-of-vision considered courtroom actor courtroom participants distraction effects research distraction research distractor television camera Duchowski 2007 educational effects issues effects of TCB empirical research examine example eye-tracking experiment eye-tracking research eye-tracking technology eyewitness identification film Fixational Eye Movements flaws focus focused footage forms of courtroom forms of TCB Hollingsworth Hulse and Memon identified in-court distraction effects judge Judge Judy judge’s jurors jury Kowinski and Johnson legal-psychology research literature location issue Loftus looking marker shows Netteburg 1980 opinion opinion-reports particular position 1 C1 position 2 C2 potential proof of concept psychology recorded referred relation to TCB research gaps research studies research to date research-challenge Schmidt seated solicitor self-reports Short and Associates Short report solicitor or lawyer standing lawyer Stepniak subject witness TCB effects research TCB research television courtroom broadcasting Thaler Vincow and Yeh