Me. Pratarelli et Jl. Bishop, Perceptions of estimated pain experienced during execution: Effects of gender and belief in capital punishment, OMEGA-J D, 38(2), 1998, pp. 103-111
Little is known about the pain experienced by a condemned person during dif
ferent methods of execution. Even less is known about the perceptions peopl
e have about what the condemned person might experience during execution. S
even different methods of execution studied by Hillman (1993) suggest that
the possible pain experienced varies across methods. The seven methods were
rank ordered from most to least painful. A 5-point Likert scale was used w
ith undergraduate students to rate the seven methods on perceived painfulne
ss. Results revealed effects of gender, method of execution, but not belief
in capital punishment. Women rated pain significantly higher than men. Wit
h the exception of stoning and lethal injection, the remaining five methods
were not ordered like the Hillman criteria might predict. These results de
monstrate that perceptions of the amount of pain experienced by condemned i
ndividuals are not based on what the empirical evidence would predict, but
rather on some combination of experiential factors and bias From media port
rayals, the value one places on capital punishment, and empathy.