Publication | Closed Access
False confessions in the lab: Do plausibility and consequences matter?
95
Citations
34
References
2005
Year
Forensic PsychologyBehavioral SciencesMoral PsychologyPsychopathologyCognitive ScienceExam FraudManipulation (Psychology)Forensic PsychiatryDeception DetectionFantasy PronenessSocial SciencesResearch MisconductScientific MisconductPsychological EvaluationExperimental PsychologyFalse ConfessionsPsychologyHuman Research Ethic
Abstract The present paper describes three studies that examined false confessions in the laboratory. Studies 1 (N=56) and 2 (N=9) relied on the by now classic computer crash paradigm introduced by Kassin and Kiechel (Psychological Science, 7, 125–128, 1996). Study 3 (N=12) employed a novel paradigm in which undergraduate participants were falsely accused of exam fraud. Our data indicate that false confessions do occur, even when conditions become more ecologically valid. Furthermore, we explored whether individual differences in compliance, suggestibility, fantasy proneness, dissociation, and cognitive failures are related to false confessions. Of these, only fantasy proneness was associated with false confessions.
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