Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive experience of lying compared to truth telling, yet these experiences are also subject to substantial individual differences. On the basis of previous evidence of cultural differences in self-construal and remembering, we predicted and found evidence for cultural differences in the extent to which truths and lies contained self (versus other) references and perceptual (versus social) details. Participants (N = 320) of Black African, South Asian, White European and White British ethnicity completed a catch-the-liar task in which they provided genuine and fabricated statements about either their past experiences or an opinion and counter-opinion...
This research incorporated deception detection theories and their possible complications based on in...
This article reports two worldwide studies of stereotypes about liars. These studies are carried out...
<div><p>Individual differences in lie detection remain poorly understood. Bond and DePaulo’s meta-an...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
As the world gets smaller and more people engage in cross-cultural communications, their ability t...
Findings from a host of prior cross-cultural studies suggest that those of differing cultural orient...
Introduction: The verbal deception literature is largely based upon North American and Western Europ...
Background - ‘Interviewing to detect deception’ research is sparse across different Ethnic Groups. I...
Asking unexpected questions, asking the interviewee to sketch the room, and asking the interviewee t...
The cultural diversity of people encountered by front-line investigators has increased substantially...
<div>Poster presented at the 2017 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.</div><div><br></div><div>...
The present thesis focuses on two main areas of deception research. The first of these examines the...
The cultural diversity of people encountered by front-line investigators has increased substantially...
This research incorporated deception detection theories and their possible complications based on in...
This article reports two worldwide studies of stereotypes about liars. These studies are carried out...
<div><p>Individual differences in lie detection remain poorly understood. Bond and DePaulo’s meta-an...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
Change in our language when deceiving is attributable to differences in the affective and cognitive ...
As the world gets smaller and more people engage in cross-cultural communications, their ability t...
Findings from a host of prior cross-cultural studies suggest that those of differing cultural orient...
Introduction: The verbal deception literature is largely based upon North American and Western Europ...
Background - ‘Interviewing to detect deception’ research is sparse across different Ethnic Groups. I...
Asking unexpected questions, asking the interviewee to sketch the room, and asking the interviewee t...
The cultural diversity of people encountered by front-line investigators has increased substantially...
<div>Poster presented at the 2017 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.</div><div><br></div><div>...
The present thesis focuses on two main areas of deception research. The first of these examines the...
The cultural diversity of people encountered by front-line investigators has increased substantially...
This research incorporated deception detection theories and their possible complications based on in...
This article reports two worldwide studies of stereotypes about liars. These studies are carried out...
<div><p>Individual differences in lie detection remain poorly understood. Bond and DePaulo’s meta-an...