It's all about time: the influence of behaviour and timelines on suspect disclosure during investigative interviews

Andréanne Bergeron, F. Fortin, Yanick Charette, Nadine Deslauriers-Varin, Sarah Paquette
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Research on confession has usually focused on showing that it is significantly associated with individual, crime-related, and situational/contextual variables and is both a static event and a dichotomous indicator of interview success. Recent work, however, suggests that investigative interviews are a dynamic process in which interrogation strategies change over time. Using a Game Theory perspective, this study looks at the impact of behaviours of both players (interviewer and suspect) on the production of investigation-relevant information (IRI). The sub-objective is to demonstrate the usefulness of applying Game Theory to the study of investigative interviews by considering time and interaction between players as an integrative part of the analysis. Videotaped interviews related to online child sexual exploitation (n = 130) were analysed and the different behaviours of suspects and interviewers were analysed to determine if they involved (1) rapport building/active denial, (2) collaboration, (3) confrontation, (4) emotion/response, and (5) elicitation of information related to the case. Results showed that information relevant to the investigation is often provided shortly after a suspect has offered additional information or given responses that meet emotional needs (e.g. justifications). The interviewer's use of available evidence increases the likelihood that additional information will be provided, while the ability to build a rapport with the suspect is effective in the longer term, even if a positive effect is not immediately observed. Using a dynamic process approach in analysing investigative interviews provides a starting point for the creation of practical guidelines to help practitioners increase suspect collaboration during investigative interviews.
这都是时间的问题:在调查采访中,行为和时间表对嫌疑人披露的影响
摘要:关于忏悔的研究通常集中在表明它与个人、犯罪相关和情境/上下文变量显著相关,既是一个静态事件,也是一个采访成功的二元指标。然而,最近的研究表明,调查性访谈是一个动态的过程,在这个过程中,审讯策略会随着时间而变化。运用博弈论的观点,本研究着眼于双方(采访者和嫌疑人)的行为对调查相关信息(IRI)产生的影响。次要目标是通过将参与者之间的时间和互动作为分析的一个整体部分来证明将博弈论应用于调查性访谈研究的有用性。我们分析了与网络儿童性剥削相关的访谈录像(n = 130),并分析了嫌疑人和访谈者的不同行为,以确定他们是否涉及(1)建立融洽关系/主动否认,(2)合作,(3)对抗,(4)情绪/反应,以及(5)获取与案件相关的信息。结果表明,与调查有关的信息通常是在嫌疑人提供额外信息或作出满足情感需求的反应(例如辩解)后不久提供的。采访者对现有证据的使用增加了提供额外信息的可能性,而与嫌疑人建立融洽关系的能力在长期内是有效的,即使没有立即观察到积极的效果。在分析调查访谈中使用动态过程方法为创建实用指南提供了一个起点,以帮助从业者在调查访谈中增加嫌疑人的合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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