Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The Recency Principle is described by the Roger Shuy in the journal Language Log.It is used by police interrogators to have a subject incriminate himself without realizing it, and more importantly, without speaking further about the topic. It exploits a known phenomenon where people focus on the most recent topic. By quickly shifting to an unrelated topic after something incriminating was said, the interrogator can avoid having to elaborate on the statement, and avoid protest from the subject."@en }
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- Recency_principle abstract "The Recency Principle is described by the Roger Shuy in the journal Language Log.It is used by police interrogators to have a subject incriminate himself without realizing it, and more importantly, without speaking further about the topic. It exploits a known phenomenon where people focus on the most recent topic. By quickly shifting to an unrelated topic after something incriminating was said, the interrogator can avoid having to elaborate on the statement, and avoid protest from the subject.".
- Q7302338 abstract "The Recency Principle is described by the Roger Shuy in the journal Language Log.It is used by police interrogators to have a subject incriminate himself without realizing it, and more importantly, without speaking further about the topic. It exploits a known phenomenon where people focus on the most recent topic. By quickly shifting to an unrelated topic after something incriminating was said, the interrogator can avoid having to elaborate on the statement, and avoid protest from the subject.".
- Recency_principle comment "The Recency Principle is described by the Roger Shuy in the journal Language Log.It is used by police interrogators to have a subject incriminate himself without realizing it, and more importantly, without speaking further about the topic. It exploits a known phenomenon where people focus on the most recent topic. By quickly shifting to an unrelated topic after something incriminating was said, the interrogator can avoid having to elaborate on the statement, and avoid protest from the subject.".
- Q7302338 comment "The Recency Principle is described by the Roger Shuy in the journal Language Log.It is used by police interrogators to have a subject incriminate himself without realizing it, and more importantly, without speaking further about the topic. It exploits a known phenomenon where people focus on the most recent topic. By quickly shifting to an unrelated topic after something incriminating was said, the interrogator can avoid having to elaborate on the statement, and avoid protest from the subject.".