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Television Courtroom Broadcasting
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15 December 2012

SOCIAL SCIENCE / General, Television, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, LAW / General, Legal systems: courts and procedures
'In Television Courtroom Broadcasting: Distraction Effects and Eye Tracking, Paul Lambert tackles a very sensitive and controversial topic - Television Courtroom Broadcasting and its effects, which has been actively or passively ostracized not only by government, law departments, but by the scientific community as well. With this book, he showed that a New World of research on the effects of in-court distraction is waiting. In fact, “eye tracking kills the subjective reports stars” and eye movements, as true direct measure of importance, should serve in future, as a reliable source of information for Judges, Lawyers and Policy-makers.'
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Empirical Effects Studies
Chapter 3: Considering Distraction Effects Research
Chapter 4: Effects and Courtroom Participants/Actors
Chapter 5: Distraction and General Research Studies
Chapter 6: Legal-psychology and Eye-tracking
Chapter 7: The Eye-tracking Distraction Solution
Chapter 8: The First TCB Eye-tracking Demonstration
Chapter 9: The Judge
Chapter 10: The Witness
Chapter 11: The Solicitor/Barrister/Lawyer
Chapter 12: Location Issues
Chapter 13: Conclusion
Appendix 1: Diagrams from Short Report Study