By Howard L. Nations
Board Certified in Personal Injury and Civil Trial Law
Texas Board of Legal Specialization
By Amy Singer, Ph.D.
Trial Consultants, Inc.
Web site: http://www.trialconsultants.com
Table of Contents | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15
A. CREATING AND ADAPTING THEMES
- Developing Case Specific Themes
- Adapting Standard Themes
- Thematic Anchoring
- Psychological Principle of Structuring
- Psychological Tools of Structure
- Primacy
- Thematic Anchoring
- (1) Anchoring Through Repetition
- (2) Anchoring Technique
- (3) Collapsing an Anchor
- (4) Anchor Recalls Entire Experience
- Neurolinguistic Programming – Pacing
- (1) Pacing to Create Similarities
- (2) Matching and Mismatching
- (3) Pacing at all Levels
- (4) Pacing in the Primary Representational System
- Embedded Commands
- (1) Communicate a Command to the Unconscious Mind
- (2) Preface, Pause, Voice Change and Command
- The Zeigarnik Effect
- Recency
- Rhetorical Tools of Structure
- Triad
- Parallel Structure
- Antithesis
- Repetition
- (1) Repetition At The Beginning
- (2) Refrain
- (3) Echo Effect
- (4) Augmentative Repetition
- (5) Repetition of the Central Theme
- Thematic Reversal
- Rhetorical Question
- Alliteration
- Understatement
- Grammatical Inversion
- Rhythm
- Verbal Tools of Structure
- Power Word Choices
- (1) Abstract vs. Concrete
- – (a) Simulative Concrete Words
- – (b) Deliberative Abstract Terms
- – (c) Preloaded Word Selection and Avoidance
- (2) Catch Phrases
- (3) Emotive Words
- (4) Logical vs. Emotional Words
- (5) Short, Long, Old & New Words
- (6) Bilingual: Technical & Lay
- (7) Use of Jargon
- (8) Slang
- (9) Vernacular or Colloquialism
- (10) Language of the Case
- (1) Abstract vs. Concrete
- Analogies
- Metaphors
- Similes
- Establish Sense of Humor
- Anecdotes
- Quotes
- (1) Prose
- (2) Poetry
- (3) Biblical Quotes & Parables
- (4) Song Lyrics
- (5) Literature
- (6) Witnesses/Parties
- (7) Medical Quotations
- Adapting Standard Arguments
- (1) Pain and Suffering
- – (a) Measuring Physical Pain and Suffering
- – (b) Constitutional right to be free from pain
- – (c) Pain is life’s window into hell
- – (d) Job ad – catastrophic injury
- – (e) Minimum wage
- (2) Value of Human Life
- (3) Full Justice
- Power Word Choices
C. PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION OF POWER THEMES AND MESSAGES
- Non Verbal Communication
- a. The Importance of the Pause
- b. Pacing the Jury
- c. Movements and Gestures
- d. Touching the Client
- e. Dressing for Summation
- Mood Transference
- a. Transferring a Feeling
- b. Transferring Factual Information
- c. Transferring Visual Information
D. DR. AMY SINGER: CASE THEMES
- Jury-Validated Trial Themes
- Few Attorneys Think Thematically
- Rhetoric Requires Themes
- Themes Essential for Juries
- What Makes a Good Trial Theme?
- How Not to Determine Themes
- Intuition
- Finding the Ideal Trial Theme
- Litigation Research
- Surrogate Juries
- Who “Owns” the Theme?
- Using Themes Effectively in the Courtroom
- The Best Jury Research Format to Test Trial Themes
- Must Use the Right Theme
- Developing the Right Trial Theme
- Trial Theme Discovery
- Enveloping the Theme
- It Don’t Mean a Thing If it Ain’t Got That Theme
- Identifying the Conversation
- Complex Cases Require Strong Themes
- Themes Can Spice up Boring Cases
Table of Contents | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15