AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigated how sleep deprivation affects behavior during interrogations, focusing on how it influences the disclosure of past illegal activities.
  • - Healthy participants (N = 143) were either allowed to sleep normally or restricted to 4 hours of sleep over two days, and their disclosures were assessed based on quantity and quality.
  • - Results showed that sleep-restricted individuals disclosed similar offenses but provided less detailed information, indicating that sleep deprivation negatively impacts motivation and recall, suggesting caution for interrogators.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Despite centuries of using sleep deprivation to interrogate, there is virtually no scientific evidence on how sleep shapes behavior within interrogation settings. To evaluate the impact of sleeplessness on participants' behavior during investigative interviews, an experimental study examined the impact of sleep restriction on disclosure of past illegal behavior.

Methods: Healthy participants from a university community (N = 143) either maintained or curbed their sleep (up to 4 h a night) across 2 days with sleep monitored via actigraphy. They were then asked to disclose past illegal acts and interviewed about them. Next, they were reinterviewed following an example of a detailed memory account (model statement). Disclosures were blindly coded for quantity and quality by two independent raters.

Results: Sleep-restricted individuals reported similar offenses, but less information during their disclosure with slightly less precision. Model statement increased disclosure but did not reduce the inhibiting impact of sleep loss. Mediation analysis confirmed the causal role of sleep as responsible for experimental differences in amount of information, and participants' reports suggested impaired motivation to recall information played a role.

Conclusions: The findings suggest that even moderate sleep loss can inhibit criminal disclosure during interviews, point to motivational factors as responsible, and suggest investigators should be cautious when interrogating sleepy participants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8503835PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab124DOI Listing

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