Which juror voted not guilty in the first vote?
Who is Juror 8?
What city does the play take place? What is the significance of the weather outside?
Where is New york? What is hot weather to increase tension and anger?
Which fallacy happens when you do something based off the majority?
What is bandwagon?
This bias occurs when a juror only seeks evidence that supports their preconceived notions about the defendant. What is it?
What is confirmation bias?
Which juror is the last to change their vote?
Who is juror 3?
Which piece of evidence supports juror 8's argument of not guilty?
What is a knife?
Which fallacy attacks one's character rather than their argument?
What is ad hominem?
This juror believes he understands the case thoroughly, despite lacking critical insights, exemplifying this bias. Who is he and what bias does he use?
Who is juror 3? What is dunning-kruger bias?
Which juror is the most racist?
Who is juror 10?
Whose testimony was doubted by juror 8 so they decided to reinact it?
Who is the old man's testimony?
This fallacy is illustrated when a juror assumes the defendant is guilty because of his background. What is it?
What is hasty generalization?
This bias happens when a juror feels uneasy about changing their vote after hearing new evidence, creating a conflict between their initial belief and the new information. What is it?
What is cognitive dissonance bias?
Which juror only analyzes the evidence?
Who is juror 4?
About what time did the victim die?
What is midnight?
Which logical fallacy that suggests that a relatively small first step or action will lead to a chain of related events?
What is slippery slope?
This juror displays overconfidence in his assessment of the evidence, demonstrating a lack of awareness about his limited knowledge of the law. What is this bias called?
What is dunning-kruger bias?
Which juror has tickets to a baseball game?
Who is juror 7?
What does juror 3 do while the other jurors discuss the el train?
What is play tic-tac-toe?
Which logical fallacy that assumes that because one event follows another, the first event must be the cause of the second event.
What is faulty casualty?
A juror who initially supports a guilty verdict struggles to change his mind when faced with strong arguments for reasonable doubt, illustrating this psychological tension. What is it?
What is cognitive dissonance bias?