European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context (Dec 2019)

The Efficacy of Using Countermeasures in a Model Statement Interview

  • Aldert Vrij,
  • Sharon Leal,
  • Ronald P. Fisher,
  • Samantha Mann,
  • Haneen Deeb,
  • Eunkyung Jo,
  • Claudia Castro Campos,
  • Samer Hamzeh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5093/ejpalc2020a3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 23 – 34

Abstract

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In a countermeasures experiment, we examined to what extent liars who learn about the Model Statement tool and about the proportion of complications (complications/complications + common knowledge details + self-handicapping strategies) can successfully adjust their responses so that they sound like truth tellers. Truth tellers discussed a trip they had made; liars fabricated a story. Participants were of Lebanese, Mexican, and South-Korean origin. Prior to the interview they did or did not receive information about (i) the working of the Model statement and (ii) three types of verbal detail: complications, common knowledge details and self-handicapping strategies. We found no evidence that liars sounded like truth tellers after being informed about the Model Statement and/or types of detail we examined. Actually, veracity differences were similar across experimental conditions, with truth tellers reporting more detail and more complications and obtaining a higher proportion of complications score than liars.

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