Evidence-based suspicion and the prior probability of guilt in police interrogations.
Sarah A MoodyJean J CabellTyler N LivingstonYueran YangPublished in: Law and human behavior (2022)
Implementing the evidence-based suspicion practice can help police reduce false confessions, reallocate investigation time and resources, and assist prosecutors in building strong cases for trial. Likewise, researchers should expand the empirical and legal questions they ask and incorporate priors into their interrogation experiments to improve the generalizability of findings to the criminal justice system. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).