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Título
How emotions affect judgement and decision making in an interrogation scenario
Autor(es)
Fecha de publicación
2020
Citación
Sambrano, D., Masip, J., & Blandón‐Gitlin, I. (2021). How emotions affect judgement and decision making in an interrogation scenario. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 26(1), 62-82. https://doi.org/10.1111/lcrp.12181
Resumen
[EN]Purpose. Little research exists on the influence of emotion in forensic settings. To start
filling this gap, we used a hypothetical interrogation scenario to examine the effects of
emotional state on judgement, decision making, and information-processing style across
two separate experiments.
Methods. The participants were induced a specific emotion. Then, they read a scenario
where a suspect was arrested and rated (1) the suspect’s guilt, and (2) the extent to which
they would use a number of tactics to interview the suspect. Based on the feelings-asinformation
theory and cognitive-appraisal theories of emotion, we predicted that
relative to angry or happy participants, sad participants would be less inclined to judge the
suspect as guilty (judgement), would show a stronger tendency to select benevolent
interrogation tactics and a weaker tendency to select hostile interrogation tactics
(decision making), and would be more likely to use an analytic (rather than a heuristic)
processing style.
Results. In Experiment 1 (conducted with college students), the judgement hypothesis
was supported. In Experiment 2 (with mTurkers), the decision-making hypothesis was
supported. A meta-analysis of the two experiments revealed that participants were more
willing to select benevolent than hostile interrogation tactics and that, as predicted, sad
participants were more willing than angry or happy participants to select benevolent
tactics. However, emotion did not affect the participants’ tendency to select hostile
tactics.
Conclusion. We tested emotion theories in an interrogation scenario. The significant
results were consistent with the feelings-as-information and cognitive-appraisal theories
of emotion and have practical relevance.
URI
ISSN
1355-3259
DOI
10.1111/lcrp.12181
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- PSIJU. Artículos [45]
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