Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
930408 International Journal of Psychophysiology 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Gaze measures allow for revealing crime related knowledge in a traditional CIT.•Fixations seem to reflect recognition memory during stimulus perception.•Eye-blinks seem to reflect subsequent processes related to response monitoring.•Number and duration of fixations correlated with autonomic indices of recognition.

The Concealed Information Test (CIT) is a method of forensic psychophysiology that allows for revealing concealed crime related knowledge. Such detection is usually based on autonomic responses but there is a huge interest in other measures that can be acquired unobtrusively. Eye movements and blinks might be such measures but their validity is unclear. Using a mock crime procedure with a manipulation of the arousal during the crime as well as the delay between crime and CIT, we tested whether eye tracking measures allow for detecting concealed knowledge. Guilty participants showed fewer but longer fixations on central crime details and this effect was even present after stimulus offset and accompanied by a reduced blink rate. These ocular measures were partly sensitive for induction of emotional arousal and time of testing. Validity estimates were moderate but indicate that a significant differentiation between guilty and innocent subjects is possible. Future research should further investigate validity differences between gaze measures during a CIT and explore the underlying mechanisms.

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