The purpose of the present study is to differentiate between innocent suspects who have knowledge of crime information and guilty suspects. The study investigated eye-movement differences among three groups: a guilty group who took part in a mock crime, an innocent-aware group who did not commit a mock crime but were exposed to the crime stimuli, and an innocent-unaware group who neither committed a mock crime nor had crime-relevant information. Each group's eye movements were tracked while all participants viewed stimuli (crime-relevant, crime-irrelevant, and neutral). The results revealed that the guilty group not only viewed all stimuli later than the other groups, they also viewed crime-relevant and crime-irrelevant stimuli for a shorte...
For more than a century psychologists have utilized eye tracking as a window into how we think and h...
Eyewitnesses to crimes sometimes perform cognitively demanding tasks while simultaneously observing ...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
Previous studies with the eye-tracking technology have predominantly tracked eye parameters in respo...
Objective of the study. Research with the eye tracking technology in deceptive behavior have mostly ...
grantor: University of TorontoIn the psychophysiological detection of deception, the Guilt...
Previous studies with the eye-tracking technology have predominantly tracked eye parameters in respo...
Accurate, reliable and valid measures of lying have eluded clinicians for decades. Attempts to use i...
A common belief in police officers is that guilty suspects' statements are less consistent than inno...
Background: Criminal associates such as terrorist members are likely to deny knowing members of thei...
The current study tested whether a simple Stroop paradigm can be used to detect deceptive behavior. ...
Background: In criminal investigations, uncooperative witnesses might deny knowing a perpetrator, th...
The aim of the current thesis was to extend research on suspect alibis by exploring how the process ...
The present study examined the detection of concealed information by combining a virtual mock crime ...
Determining the true perpetrator of a crime while exonerating innocent suspects forms the foundation...
For more than a century psychologists have utilized eye tracking as a window into how we think and h...
Eyewitnesses to crimes sometimes perform cognitively demanding tasks while simultaneously observing ...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
Previous studies with the eye-tracking technology have predominantly tracked eye parameters in respo...
Objective of the study. Research with the eye tracking technology in deceptive behavior have mostly ...
grantor: University of TorontoIn the psychophysiological detection of deception, the Guilt...
Previous studies with the eye-tracking technology have predominantly tracked eye parameters in respo...
Accurate, reliable and valid measures of lying have eluded clinicians for decades. Attempts to use i...
A common belief in police officers is that guilty suspects' statements are less consistent than inno...
Background: Criminal associates such as terrorist members are likely to deny knowing members of thei...
The current study tested whether a simple Stroop paradigm can be used to detect deceptive behavior. ...
Background: In criminal investigations, uncooperative witnesses might deny knowing a perpetrator, th...
The aim of the current thesis was to extend research on suspect alibis by exploring how the process ...
The present study examined the detection of concealed information by combining a virtual mock crime ...
Determining the true perpetrator of a crime while exonerating innocent suspects forms the foundation...
For more than a century psychologists have utilized eye tracking as a window into how we think and h...
Eyewitnesses to crimes sometimes perform cognitively demanding tasks while simultaneously observing ...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...