{
  "creator": [
    "Wilkinson, Dean J.",
    "Caulfield, Laura S."
  ],
  "date": [
    "2017-08-31"
  ],
  "description": [
    "Probabilistic reasoning biases have been widely associated with levels of delusional belief ideation (Galbraith, Manktelow, &amp; Morris, 2010; Lincoln, Ziegler, Mehl, &amp; Rief, 2010; Speechley, Whitman, &amp; Woodward, 2010; White &amp; Mansell, 2009), however, little research has focused on biases occurring during every day reasoning (Galbraith, Manktelow, &amp; Morris, 2011), and moral and crime based reasoning (Wilkinson, Caulfield, &amp; Jones, 2014; Wilkinson, Jones, &amp; Caulfield, 2011). 235 participants were recruited across four experiments exploring crime based reasoning through different modalities and dual processing tasks. Study one explored delusional ideation when completing a visually presented crime based reasoning task. Study two explored the same task in an auditory presentation. Study three utilised a dual task paradigm to explore modality and executive functioning. Study four extended this paradigm to the auditory modality. The results indicated that modality and delusional ideation have a significant effect on individuals reasoning about violent and non-violent crime (p &lt; .05), which could have implication for the presentation of evidence in applied setting such as the courtroom."
  ],
  "format": [
    "application/pdf",
    "text/html"
  ],
  "identifier": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1181",
    "10.5964/ejop.v13i3.1181"
  ],
  "language": [
    "eng"
  ],
  "publisher": [
    "PsychOpen GOLD / Leibniz Institut for Psychology (ZPID)"
  ],
  "relation": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1181/1181.pdf",
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1181/1181.html"
  ],
  "rights": [
    "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0"
  ],
  "source": [
    "Europe’s Journal of Psychology; Vol. 13 No. 3 (2017); 503-518",
    "1841-0413"
  ],
  "subject": [
    "delusional ideation",
    "crime based reasoning",
    "cognition"
  ],
  "title": [
    "Delusional Ideation, Cognitive Processes and Crime Based Reasoning"
  ],
  "type": [
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/article",
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion"
  ]
}