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How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information

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How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information. / Neequaye, David A.; Lorson, Alexandra.
In: Royal Society Open Science, Vol. 10, No. 8, 230986, 31.08.2023.

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Neequaye DA, Lorson A. How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information. Royal Society Open Science. 2023 Aug 31;10(8):230986. Epub 2023 Aug 16. doi: 10.1098/rsos.230986

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Neequaye, David A. ; Lorson, Alexandra. / How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information. In: Royal Society Open Science. 2023 ; Vol. 10, No. 8.

Bibtex

@article{664d60f6375741d2b98f1b9a6c34702e,
title = "How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information",
abstract = "This research explored how intelligence interviewees mentally identify the relevant information at their disposal. We theorized that interviewees estimate the interviewer's objectives based on how they frame any attempt to solicit information. Then interviewees organize the information they possess into item designations that pragmatically correspond to the perceived interviewer-objective. The more an interviewer specifies what they want to know, the more the interviewee will mentally designate information items corresponding with that objective. To examine the theory, we conducted two identical experiments wherein participants assumed the role of an informant with one of two dispositions. They were to be cooperative or resistant when undergoing an interview. The interviewer posed specific or ambiguous questions. In Study 1 (N = 210), interviewees identified applicable information items based on their interviewer's questions. And interviewees answered their interviewer's questions in Study 2 (N = 199). We aimed to demonstrate that question type influences mental designations and disposition affects disclosures. Disposition had a stronger influence on interviewees' disclosure than when reasoning about what the interviewer wants to know. But contrary to our expectations, mental designation preferences indicated that interviewees generally assume interviewers want to know complete details, irrespective of question specificity. We suggest avenues for future research.",
keywords = "disclosure, intelligence gathering, intelligence interviewing, pragmatic inference, relevance theory",
author = "Neequaye, {David A.} and Alexandra Lorson",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1098/rsos.230986",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Royal Society Open Science",
issn = "2054-5703",
publisher = "The Royal Society",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How intelligence interviewees mentally identify relevant information

AU - Neequaye, David A.

AU - Lorson, Alexandra

PY - 2023/8/31

Y1 - 2023/8/31

N2 - This research explored how intelligence interviewees mentally identify the relevant information at their disposal. We theorized that interviewees estimate the interviewer's objectives based on how they frame any attempt to solicit information. Then interviewees organize the information they possess into item designations that pragmatically correspond to the perceived interviewer-objective. The more an interviewer specifies what they want to know, the more the interviewee will mentally designate information items corresponding with that objective. To examine the theory, we conducted two identical experiments wherein participants assumed the role of an informant with one of two dispositions. They were to be cooperative or resistant when undergoing an interview. The interviewer posed specific or ambiguous questions. In Study 1 (N = 210), interviewees identified applicable information items based on their interviewer's questions. And interviewees answered their interviewer's questions in Study 2 (N = 199). We aimed to demonstrate that question type influences mental designations and disposition affects disclosures. Disposition had a stronger influence on interviewees' disclosure than when reasoning about what the interviewer wants to know. But contrary to our expectations, mental designation preferences indicated that interviewees generally assume interviewers want to know complete details, irrespective of question specificity. We suggest avenues for future research.

AB - This research explored how intelligence interviewees mentally identify the relevant information at their disposal. We theorized that interviewees estimate the interviewer's objectives based on how they frame any attempt to solicit information. Then interviewees organize the information they possess into item designations that pragmatically correspond to the perceived interviewer-objective. The more an interviewer specifies what they want to know, the more the interviewee will mentally designate information items corresponding with that objective. To examine the theory, we conducted two identical experiments wherein participants assumed the role of an informant with one of two dispositions. They were to be cooperative or resistant when undergoing an interview. The interviewer posed specific or ambiguous questions. In Study 1 (N = 210), interviewees identified applicable information items based on their interviewer's questions. And interviewees answered their interviewer's questions in Study 2 (N = 199). We aimed to demonstrate that question type influences mental designations and disposition affects disclosures. Disposition had a stronger influence on interviewees' disclosure than when reasoning about what the interviewer wants to know. But contrary to our expectations, mental designation preferences indicated that interviewees generally assume interviewers want to know complete details, irrespective of question specificity. We suggest avenues for future research.

KW - disclosure

KW - intelligence gathering

KW - intelligence interviewing

KW - pragmatic inference

KW - relevance theory

U2 - 10.1098/rsos.230986

DO - 10.1098/rsos.230986

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - Royal Society Open Science

JF - Royal Society Open Science

SN - 2054-5703

IS - 8

M1 - 230986

ER -