
Published online:
01 May 2010
Published in print:
08 January 2010
Online ISBN:
9780199776917
Print ISBN:
9780195367584
Contents
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Background Background
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Experts-Should-Be-Perfect Argument Experts-Should-Be-Perfect Argument
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Domain Differences Domain Differences
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Analysts' View of Experts Analysts' View of Experts
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Importance of Domains Importance of Domains
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Implications for Research Implications for Research
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Note Note
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Chapter
16 16 Expertise of Court Judges
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Pages
269–278
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Published:January 2010
Cite
Shanteau, James, and Len Dalgleish, '16 Expertise of Court Judges', in David E. Klein, and Gregory Mitchell (eds), The Psychology of Judicial Decision Making, AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGY-LAW SOCIETY (New York , 2010; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2010), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195367584.003.0016, accessed 28 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
We argue that expert performance is not best understood and assessed in terms of general characteristics applying across all domains. Rather, it should be analyzed in the context of the specific tasks that experts in a particular domain are called on to accomplish. Drawing on a substantial line of research from psychology, we argue that considerable empirical evidence supports this domain-specific view of expert competence, that there are reasons to believe this view holds with respect to court judges, and that, to be as fair and useful as possible, assessments of judicial performance should incorporate this view.
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