TY - JOUR PY - 2019// TI - Does alcohol loosen the tongue? Intoxicated individuals' willingness to report transgressions or criminal behavior carried out by themselves or others JO - Applied cognitive psychology A1 - Mindthoff, Amelia A1 - Hagsand, Angelica V. A1 - Compo, Nadja Schreiber A1 - Evans, Jacqueline R. SP - 414 EP - 425 VL - 33 IS - 3 N2 - Police commonly interview intoxicated suspects. This is concerning when suspects are innocent because intoxication often leads to a higher risk for impulsive decision making and reduces inhibition. However, the manner in which intoxication affects people's reporting of unethical or criminal actions carried out by themselves or others is unknown and was thus addressed in the current study. Participants (N = 116) were randomly assigned to one of six conditions based on a 2 (transgression: self, other) × 3 (alcohol condition: low-to-moderate intoxication, placebo, sober-control) between-participants design. After drinking their assigned beverages, participants were asked to disclose a transgression. No main effect of alcohol emerged. However, the odds that participants would report a transgression were significantly higher if they were asked to report a personal, rather than someone else's, transgression. Overall, low-to-moderate intoxication did not increase the likelihood of sensitive information disclosure in this initial study, but additional research is needed.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0888-4080 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acp.3480 ID - ref1 ER -