
@article{ref1,
title="Horrific images of crime scenes: viewing strategies, excited emotions and judgment",
journal="Tijdschrift voor Criminologie",
year="2017",
author="Dillen, Lotte and Vanderveen, Gabry",
volume="59",
number="1-2",
pages="-",
abstract="Eyetracking enabled the authors to study eye movements of 23 participants who looked at crime scene photographs. The authors measured the emotions elicited by the photographs, as well as perceptions of seriousness and the sentence that participants would give the perpetrator of the crime. Also, individual differences in disgust sensitivity were taken into account. <br><br>RESULTS show a positive relationship between disgust sensitivity and both the proportion of fixations as well as the number of fixations on gruesome aspects of the photos (the blood and the wound), emotion ratings of the photographs, perceptions of seriousness, and the sentence given. Implications, limitations, and future directions of the research are discussed.   Trefwoorden	eyetracking, crime scene photography, disgust sensitivity, perceptions of seriousness, penal decision-making<p /> <p>Language: nl</p>",
language="nl",
issn="0165-182X",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}