In the first part of this article, I will briefly review research findings that show that professional lie catchers, such as police officers, are generally rather poor at distinguishing between truths and lies. I believe that there are many reasons contributing towards this poor ability, and will give an overview of these reasons in the second part of this article. I also believe that professionals could become better lie detectors and will explain how in the final part of this article. Lie detection
To date, the majority of investigations into accuracy in detecting deception has used low-stakes lie...
Much work has been done to seek ways of distinguishing deception (lying) from truthfulness. Some but...
In recent years, police departments have shown increasing interest in using lie detection methods. S...
Studies based on mean accuracy of a group of subjects suggest that most observers do no better than ...
Abstract We examined whether individuals ’ ability to detect deception remained stable over time. In...
We are very inaccurate lie detectors, and tend to believe what others tell us is the truth more ofte...
It has been commonplace in the deception literature to assert the pervasive nature of deception in c...
Absent a perceived motive for deception, people will infer that a message source is honest. As a con...
C © American Psychology-Law Society/Division 41 of the American Psychological Association 2007 Abstr...
C © American Psychology-Law Society/Division 41 of the American Psychological Association 2006 Abstr...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Psychology, Crime and ...
Lie detection is an important topic to study because it gives researchers, police officers, and peop...
An individual's ability to discriminate lies from truth is far from accurate, and is poorly related ...
The study investigated experienced police officers ’ (N = 30) lie detection accuracy. Each police of...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Wright, C., & Wheatcroft, J. M. (2017). ...
To date, the majority of investigations into accuracy in detecting deception has used low-stakes lie...
Much work has been done to seek ways of distinguishing deception (lying) from truthfulness. Some but...
In recent years, police departments have shown increasing interest in using lie detection methods. S...
Studies based on mean accuracy of a group of subjects suggest that most observers do no better than ...
Abstract We examined whether individuals ’ ability to detect deception remained stable over time. In...
We are very inaccurate lie detectors, and tend to believe what others tell us is the truth more ofte...
It has been commonplace in the deception literature to assert the pervasive nature of deception in c...
Absent a perceived motive for deception, people will infer that a message source is honest. As a con...
C © American Psychology-Law Society/Division 41 of the American Psychological Association 2007 Abstr...
C © American Psychology-Law Society/Division 41 of the American Psychological Association 2006 Abstr...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Psychology, Crime and ...
Lie detection is an important topic to study because it gives researchers, police officers, and peop...
An individual's ability to discriminate lies from truth is far from accurate, and is poorly related ...
The study investigated experienced police officers ’ (N = 30) lie detection accuracy. Each police of...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Wright, C., & Wheatcroft, J. M. (2017). ...
To date, the majority of investigations into accuracy in detecting deception has used low-stakes lie...
Much work has been done to seek ways of distinguishing deception (lying) from truthfulness. Some but...
In recent years, police departments have shown increasing interest in using lie detection methods. S...