Journalartikel

Detecting deception in suspects: verbal cues as a function of interview strategy


AutorenlisteHartwig, Maria; Granhag, Par A.; Stromwall, Leif; Wolf, Ann G.; Vrij, Aldert; Af Hjelmsater, Emma Roos

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2011

Seiten643-656

ZeitschriftPsychology, Crime and Law

Bandnummer17

Heftnummer7

ISSN1068-316X

eISSN1477-2744

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1080/10683160903446982

VerlagTaylor and Francis Group


Abstract
Research on deception has consistently shown that people are poor at detecting deception, partly due to lack of consistent cues to deception. This research focuses on eliciting verbal cues to deception when questioning suspects who deny crime and how such cues differ due to type of questioning. An experiment examined verbal differences between innocent and guilty mock suspects (N = 96) as a function of veracity and interview style (Free recall, Probes, or Free recall plus Probes). Guilty (vs innocent) suspects omitted more crime-relevant information and their statements were more likely to contradict the evidence, showing that statement-evidence inconsistency was a cue to deception. This cue to deception was more pronounced when the interview contained probes. Lie-catchers (N=192) obtained an accuracy rate higher than chance (61.5%) for detecting deceptive denials. Implications for further research on verbal cues to deception are discussed.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilHartwig, M., Granhag, P., Stromwall, L., Wolf, A., Vrij, A. and Af Hjelmsater, E. (2011) Detecting deception in suspects: verbal cues as a function of interview strategy, Psychology, Crime and Law, 17(7), pp. 643-656. https://doi.org/10.1080/10683160903446982

APA-ZitierstilHartwig, M., Granhag, P., Stromwall, L., Wolf, A., Vrij, A., & Af Hjelmsater, E. (2011). Detecting deception in suspects: verbal cues as a function of interview strategy. Psychology, Crime and Law. 17(7), 643-656. https://doi.org/10.1080/10683160903446982



Schlagwörter


BENEFITDECEPTIONGUILTYINNOCENCEINTERROGATION ROOMinterviewing strategiesinterviewing to detect deceptionNONVERBAL BEHAVIORPSYCHOLOGYquestioningTRUTHverbal cues

Zuletzt aktualisiert 2025-02-04 um 02:57