Validity of the Reaction Time Concealed Information Test in a Prison Sample

被引:8
|
作者
Suchotzki, Kristina [1 ]
Kakavand, Aileen [1 ]
Gamer, Matthias [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Psychol, Wurzburg, Germany
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY | 2019年 / 9卷
关键词
concealed information test; deception; lying; reaction times; inmates; forensic sample; GUILTY KNOWLEDGE; METAANALYSIS; PSYCHOPATHY; INHIBITION; PREVALENCE; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00745
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Detecting whether a suspect possesses incriminating (e.g., crime-related) information can provide valuable decision aids in court. To this means, the Concealed Information Test (CIT) has been developed and is currently applied on a regular basis in Japan. But whereas research has revealed a high validity of the CIT in student and normal populations, research investigating its validity in forensic samples in scarce. This applies even more to the reaction time-based CIT (RT-CIT), where no such research is available so far. The current study tested the application of the RT-CIT for an imaginary mock crime scenario both in a sample of prisoners (n = 27) and a matched control group (n = 25). Results revealed a high validity of the RT-CIT for discriminating between crime-related and crime-unrelated information, visible in medium to very high effect sizes for error rates and reaction times. Interestingly, in accordance with theories that criminal offenders may have worse response inhibition capacities and that response inhibition plays a crucial role in the RT-CIT, CIT-effects in the error rates were even elevated in the prisoners compared to the control group. No support for this hypothesis could, however, be found in reaction time CIT-effects. Also, performance in a standard Stroop task, that was conducted to measure executive functioning, did not differ between both groups and no correlation was found between Stroop task performance and performance in the RT-CIT. Despite frequently raised concerns that the RT-CIT may not be applicable in non-student and forensic populations, our results thereby do suggest that such a use may be possible and that effects seem to be quite large. Future research should build up on these findings by increasing the realism of the crime and interrogation situation and by further investigating the replicability and the theoretical substantiation of increased effects in non-student and forensic samples.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Applicability and validity of the reaction time-based concealed information test in a prison sample
    Haberler, Julian
    Suchotzki, Kristina
    Meinhardt, Maria
    Gamer, Matthias
    LEGAL AND CRIMINOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024,
  • [2] How Vulnerable is the Reaction Time Concealed Information Test to Faking?
    Suchotzki, Kristina
    Verschuere, Bruno
    Gamer, Matthias
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH IN MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2021, 10 (02) : 268 - 277
  • [3] The validity of pupillary responses in the concealed information test
    Ogawa, Tokihiro
    Matsuda, Izumi
    Michiko, Tsuneoka
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 : 606 - 607
  • [4] Influence of countermeasures on the validity of the Concealed Information Test
    Peth, Judith
    Suchotzki, Kristina
    Gamer, Matthias
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2016, 53 (09) : 1429 - 1440
  • [5] Psychopathic traits and autonomic responding to concealed information in a prison sample
    Verschuere, B
    Crombez, G
    De Clercq, A
    Koster, EHW
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 42 (02) : 239 - 245
  • [6] Predicting the Sensitivity of the Reaction Time-based Concealed Information Test
    Noordraven, Ernst
    Verschuere, Bruno
    APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 27 (03) : 328 - 335
  • [7] Antisociality, underarousal and the validity of the Concealed Information Polygraph Test
    Verschuere, Bruno
    Crombez, Geert
    Koster, Ernst H. W.
    De Clercq, Armand
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 74 (03) : 309 - 318
  • [8] Criminality, underarousal and the validity of the Concealed Information polygraph Test
    Verschuere, Bruno
    Crombez, Geert
    Koster, Ernst
    De Clercq, Armand
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2006, 43 : S101 - S101
  • [9] Seen this scene? Scene recognition in the reaction-time Concealed Information Test
    Danielle G. Norman
    Daniel A. Gunnell
    Aleksandra J. Mrowiec
    Derrick G. Watson
    Memory & Cognition, 2020, 48 : 1388 - 1402
  • [10] Seen this scene? Scene recognition in the reaction-time Concealed Information Test
    Norman, Danielle G.
    Gunnell, Daniel A.
    Mrowiec, Aleksandra J.
    Watson, Derrick G.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2020, 48 (08) : 1388 - 1402