Richardson, Beth and Taylor, Paul J. and Snook, Brent and Conchie, Stacey and Bennell, Craig (2014) Language style matching and police interrogation outcomes. Law and Human Behavior, 38 (4). pp. 357-366. ISSN 0147-7307
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
This research examined the coordination of interrogator and suspects’ verbal behavior in interrogations. Sixty-four police interrogations were examined at the aggregate and utterance level using a measure of verbal mimicry known as Language Style Matching. Analyses revealed an interaction between confession and the direction of language matching. Interrogations containing a confession were characterized by higher rates of the suspect matching the interrogators’ language style than interrogations without a confession. A sequence analysis of utterance-level Language Style Matching revealed a divergence in the type of matching that occurred across outcome. There was a linear increase in interrogator-led matching for interrogations containing a confession and an increase in suspect-led matching for nonconfession interrogations. These findings suggest that police interrogations play out, in part, at the basic level of language coordination.