RT Article T1 Essentialist thinking predicts culpability and punishment judgments JF Psychology, crime & law VO 28 IS 3 SP 246 OP 267 A1 Xu, Yian A2 Berryessa, Colleen M. A2 Dowd, Mackenzie A2 Penta, Darrell A2 Coley, John D. LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1797405640 AB People often perceive social groups (e.g. ethnic groups, occupations, gender groups) as having fixed membership and discrete boundaries. This paper proposes that essentialist beliefs about abstract crime concepts, as naturally defined and universally coherent, play a role in culpability and sentencing judgments. In three studies, a general sample of college students (Study 1, n = 52), a lay public sample recruited from MTurk (Study 2, n = 102), and a sample of college students recruited from criminal justice classrooms (Study 3, n = 62) read crime vignettes and made culpability and sentencing decisions. We measured essentialist beliefs about crime categories by using an adapted essentialism scale for crimes, hypothesizing that essentialist tendencies would predict higher culpability ratings and harsher punishments. Results showed that lay participants had an overall tendency to endorse essentialist statements, and their essentialist ratings significantly predicted culpability and sentencing judgments with regards to the corresponding crimes. In contrast, students with formal education in criminal justice showed significantly weaker essentialist thinking about crime concepts, and their essentialist ratings did not predict culpability and sentencing outcomes. The current findings provide new evidence regarding how essentialist thinking and subject matter knowledge frames lay understandings about crime concepts, and how such intuitive beliefs may systematically influence legal judgments. K1 Expertise K1 Sentencing K1 Culpability K1 Crime K1 Essentialism DO 10.1080/1068316X.2021.1905812