TY - JOUR
T1 - Are you as good as me at telling a story? Individual differences in interpersonal reality monitoring
AU - Nahari, Galit
AU - Vrij, Aldert
N1 - Funding Information: This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation grant (grant No. 59/11). We thank Hofit Vizman-Babay, Mor Cohen-Peled and Oshrit Turgeman for their assistance in this research.
PY - 2014/7
Y1 - 2014/7
N2 - We tested whether someone's ability to tell a good story, in terms of the Reality Monitoring (RM) tool, affects the way s/he judges the stories told by others. Forty participants (undergraduate students) wrote down two statements - one about activities they did 30 minutes ago, and the other about a past event. Subsequently, they rated the quality of a target statement written by someone else. We found that the tendency to provide a not so detailed or a very detailed statement was stable across the two statements the participants wrote. Furthermore, this tendency affected how they judged the target statements: The richer a participant's statements were compared to the target statement, the more critical the participant was in judging the target statement. These findings imply that RM is subject to biases which are related to individual differences. We discuss the implications of these findings for applying the RM lie detection tool in the field.
AB - We tested whether someone's ability to tell a good story, in terms of the Reality Monitoring (RM) tool, affects the way s/he judges the stories told by others. Forty participants (undergraduate students) wrote down two statements - one about activities they did 30 minutes ago, and the other about a past event. Subsequently, they rated the quality of a target statement written by someone else. We found that the tendency to provide a not so detailed or a very detailed statement was stable across the two statements the participants wrote. Furthermore, this tendency affected how they judged the target statements: The richer a participant's statements were compared to the target statement, the more critical the participant was in judging the target statement. These findings imply that RM is subject to biases which are related to individual differences. We discuss the implications of these findings for applying the RM lie detection tool in the field.
KW - individual differences
KW - judgemental bias
KW - legal psychology
KW - reality monitoring (RM)
KW - richness in detail
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84901001222&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1080/1068316x.2013.793771
DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/1068316x.2013.793771
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1068-316X
VL - 20
SP - 573
EP - 583
JO - Psychology, Crime and Law
JF - Psychology, Crime and Law
IS - 6
ER -