TY - JOUR
T1 - The provenance of émigrés
T2 - the validity of measuring knowledge of places
AU - van Veldhuizen, Tanja S.
AU - Horselenberg, Robert
AU - Stel, Mariëlle
AU - Landström, Sara
AU - Granhag, Pär Anders
AU - van Koppen, Peter J.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Establishing the origin of those seeking asylum is essential but difficult as asylum seekers often cannot corroborate their origin claim with documents. The aim of the present study was to assess whether asking knowledge questions, sketch questions and impossible questions are valid methods to determine the veracity of an origin claim. Participants (N = 105) from Tilburg (truth-tellers), Maastricht (partial liars) and Gothenburg (full liars) were asked to convince an interviewer that they originated from Tilburg. Half of them prepared and half of them did not prepare themselves for the interview. They were asked 10 knowledge questions typically asked to assess the credibility of origin claims, 4 impossible questions and 1 sketch question. Participants from Tilburg answered more questions correctly than participants from Maastricht and Gothenburg. Performance also improved with preparation. Even though the results did provide some support for the validity of assessing claims about origin by asking knowledge questions, the differences between the groups were modest, and it was impossible to correctly identify all truth-tellers and liars. Changing the output modality from verbal answering to sketching contributed to the credibility assessment of origin claims, whereas impossible questions were not discriminatory.
AB - Establishing the origin of those seeking asylum is essential but difficult as asylum seekers often cannot corroborate their origin claim with documents. The aim of the present study was to assess whether asking knowledge questions, sketch questions and impossible questions are valid methods to determine the veracity of an origin claim. Participants (N = 105) from Tilburg (truth-tellers), Maastricht (partial liars) and Gothenburg (full liars) were asked to convince an interviewer that they originated from Tilburg. Half of them prepared and half of them did not prepare themselves for the interview. They were asked 10 knowledge questions typically asked to assess the credibility of origin claims, 4 impossible questions and 1 sketch question. Participants from Tilburg answered more questions correctly than participants from Maastricht and Gothenburg. Performance also improved with preparation. Even though the results did provide some support for the validity of assessing claims about origin by asking knowledge questions, the differences between the groups were modest, and it was impossible to correctly identify all truth-tellers and liars. Changing the output modality from verbal answering to sketching contributed to the credibility assessment of origin claims, whereas impossible questions were not discriminatory.
KW - asylum procedure
KW - Credibility assessment
KW - home town knowledge
KW - origin claims
KW - unexpected questions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85011689113&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/1068316X.2017.1284219
DO - 10.1080/1068316X.2017.1284219
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85011689113
SN - 1068-316X
SP - 1
EP - 22
JO - Psychology, Crime and Law
JF - Psychology, Crime and Law
ER -