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Obtaining guilty knowledge in human intelligence interrogations: Comparing accusatorial and information-gathering approaches with a novel experimental paradigm
Authors:Jacqueline R. Evans  Christian A. Meissner  Amy B. Ross  Kate A. Houston  Melissa B. Russano  Allyson J. Horgan
Affiliation:1. Psychology and Counseling, University of Texas at Tyler, United States;2. Psychology, University of Texas at El Paso, United States;3. School of Justice Studies, Roger Williams University, United States;4. MRAC LLC, United States
Abstract:Substantial research has assessed interrogations seeking to obtain a criminal confession, and consequently much has been learned regarding the potential problems with confession evidence. However, an increasing focus on counter-terrorism, and therefore intelligence interrogations, reveals an obvious gap in the literature. Intelligence interrogations are primarily focused on collecting information from individuals as opposed to a confession linked to an alleged event, and little of the extant psychological literature can speak directly to such a scenario. The current research developed an experimental paradigm to test interrogation approaches in an intelligence-gathering context, providing a method for gathering empirical data on human intelligence collection. In the first implementation of this paradigm, accusatorial and information-gathering interrogation strategies were tested using a procedure high in psychological realism. Results indicate that an information-gathering approach yields more relevant information than an accusatorial approach and leads to more diagnostic impressions by third party observers.
Keywords:Interrogation  Interviewing  National security
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