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Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews

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Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews. / Neequaye, David A.; Luke, Timothy J.; Kollback, Kristina.
In: Royal Society Open Science, Vol. 11, No. 6, 240635, 30.06.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Neequaye, DA, Luke, TJ & Kollback, K 2024, 'Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews', Royal Society Open Science, vol. 11, no. 6, 240635. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.240635

APA

Neequaye, D. A., Luke, T. J., & Kollback, K. (2024). Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews. Royal Society Open Science, 11(6), Article 240635. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.240635

Vancouver

Neequaye DA, Luke TJ, Kollback K. Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews. Royal Society Open Science. 2024 Jun 30;11(6):240635. Epub 2024 Jun 19. doi: 10.1098/rsos.240635

Author

Neequaye, David A. ; Luke, Timothy J. ; Kollback, Kristina. / Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews. In: Royal Society Open Science. 2024 ; Vol. 11, No. 6.

Bibtex

@article{733cb2d99d4640d2a8a91f4c13c837a6,
title = "Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews",
abstract = "We introduce the disclosure-outcomes management model. The model views disclosure in intelligence interviews as a behaviour interviewees use to profitably navigate self-interest dilemmas. We theorized that interviewees compare the potential outcomes of disclosing to their self-interests. They evaluate the extent to which disclosure will facilitate or impede those self-interests: an interviewee{\textquoteright}s self-interest dilemma elicits cooperation with respect to some information but not other information. A Preliminary Study (N = 300) supported the model{\textquoteright}s predictions. We proposed a Replication Study (N = 369) to examine the model further. Participants assumed the role of an intelligence source undergoing an interview. They decided what information to disclose, contending the typical dilemma in an intelligence interview wherein disclosure could jeopardize or advance their self-interests. The results from the Preliminary and Replication studies were broadly in line with our proposition: perceived benefits positively influenced the likelihood of disclosing. However, a negative interaction between costs and benefits observed in the Preliminary Study did not replicate. That finding may be due to power constraints, not evidence against the existence of an interaction effect. Our proposal that—generally speaking—interviewees are likelier to disclose information units that seem less versus more risky requires further examination. Individual-level sensitivity to benefits, costs and their co-occurrence varied substantially in our studies. We discuss avenues for future research.",
keywords = "intelligence interviewing, information management, self-interest dilemma, disclosure",
author = "Neequaye, {David A.} and Luke, {Timothy J.} and Kristina Kollback",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1098/rsos.240635",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Royal Society Open Science",
issn = "2054-5703",
publisher = "The Royal Society",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Managing disclosure outcomes in intelligence interviews

AU - Neequaye, David A.

AU - Luke, Timothy J.

AU - Kollback, Kristina

PY - 2024/6/30

Y1 - 2024/6/30

N2 - We introduce the disclosure-outcomes management model. The model views disclosure in intelligence interviews as a behaviour interviewees use to profitably navigate self-interest dilemmas. We theorized that interviewees compare the potential outcomes of disclosing to their self-interests. They evaluate the extent to which disclosure will facilitate or impede those self-interests: an interviewee’s self-interest dilemma elicits cooperation with respect to some information but not other information. A Preliminary Study (N = 300) supported the model’s predictions. We proposed a Replication Study (N = 369) to examine the model further. Participants assumed the role of an intelligence source undergoing an interview. They decided what information to disclose, contending the typical dilemma in an intelligence interview wherein disclosure could jeopardize or advance their self-interests. The results from the Preliminary and Replication studies were broadly in line with our proposition: perceived benefits positively influenced the likelihood of disclosing. However, a negative interaction between costs and benefits observed in the Preliminary Study did not replicate. That finding may be due to power constraints, not evidence against the existence of an interaction effect. Our proposal that—generally speaking—interviewees are likelier to disclose information units that seem less versus more risky requires further examination. Individual-level sensitivity to benefits, costs and their co-occurrence varied substantially in our studies. We discuss avenues for future research.

AB - We introduce the disclosure-outcomes management model. The model views disclosure in intelligence interviews as a behaviour interviewees use to profitably navigate self-interest dilemmas. We theorized that interviewees compare the potential outcomes of disclosing to their self-interests. They evaluate the extent to which disclosure will facilitate or impede those self-interests: an interviewee’s self-interest dilemma elicits cooperation with respect to some information but not other information. A Preliminary Study (N = 300) supported the model’s predictions. We proposed a Replication Study (N = 369) to examine the model further. Participants assumed the role of an intelligence source undergoing an interview. They decided what information to disclose, contending the typical dilemma in an intelligence interview wherein disclosure could jeopardize or advance their self-interests. The results from the Preliminary and Replication studies were broadly in line with our proposition: perceived benefits positively influenced the likelihood of disclosing. However, a negative interaction between costs and benefits observed in the Preliminary Study did not replicate. That finding may be due to power constraints, not evidence against the existence of an interaction effect. Our proposal that—generally speaking—interviewees are likelier to disclose information units that seem less versus more risky requires further examination. Individual-level sensitivity to benefits, costs and their co-occurrence varied substantially in our studies. We discuss avenues for future research.

KW - intelligence interviewing

KW - information management

KW - self-interest dilemma

KW - disclosure

U2 - 10.1098/rsos.240635

DO - 10.1098/rsos.240635

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

JO - Royal Society Open Science

JF - Royal Society Open Science

SN - 2054-5703

IS - 6

M1 - 240635

ER -