Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4400, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2010 Apr;17(2):168-73. doi: 10.3758/PBR.17.2.168.
Assessing informants' credibility is critical to several aspects of the legal process (e.g., when police interrogate suspects or jurors evaluate witnesses). There is a large body of research--from various areas of psychology and allied fields--about how people evaluate each others' credibility. We review the literature on lie detection and interpersonal perception to demonstrate that inferences regarding credibility may be multiply determined. Specifically, characteristics of the informant, of the listener, and of the situation affect people's perceptions of informants' credibility. We conclude with a discussion of research on calibration (i.e., an informant's confidence-accuracy relation) because it offers fruitful avenues for future credibility research in the legal domain.
评估证人的可信度是法律程序的几个方面的关键(例如,当警察讯问嫌疑人或陪审员评估证人时)。从心理学和相关领域的各个方面都有大量关于人们如何相互评估可信度的研究。我们回顾了关于谎言检测和人际感知的文献,以证明对可信度的推断可能是多重决定的。具体来说,信息提供者、听众和情况的特征都会影响人们对信息提供者可信度的感知。我们最后讨论了校准的研究(即信息提供者的信心-准确性关系),因为它为法律领域未来的可信度研究提供了富有成效的途径。