Body postures can affect how we process and attend to information. Here, a novel effect of adopting an open or closed posture on the ability to detect deception was investigated. It was hypothesized that the posture adopted by judges would affect their social acuity, resulting in differences in the detection of nonverbal behavior (i.e., microexpression recognition) and the discrimination of deceptive and truthful statements. In Study 1, adopting an open posture produced higher accuracy for detecting naturalistic lies, but no difference was observed in the recognition of brief facial expressions as compared to adopting a closed posture; trait empathy was found to have an additive effect on posture, with more empathic judges having higher dec...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
Previous research has indicated that individuals typically perform quite poorly in discerning truths...
Two studies investigated the impact of witness demeanour on the extent to which mock jurors were inf...
Body postures can affect how we process and attend to information. Here, a novel effect of adopting ...
Adopting certain body postures can affect how individuals process and attend to social information. ...
Human’s ability to detect deception has an unsettling result of around chance detection (Depaulo et ...
Research in environmental sciences has found that the ergonomic design of human-made env...
Item does not contain fulltextStudies of deception detection traditionally have focused on verbal co...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
A study was conducted to investigate the body movements of participants waiting to be interviewed in...
While making first impressions, personality judgments oftentimes are made based on how that person l...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
Recent research has shown that social power systematically influences information processing in many...
Two studies investigated the impact of witness demeanour on the extent to which mock jurors were inf...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
Previous research has indicated that individuals typically perform quite poorly in discerning truths...
Two studies investigated the impact of witness demeanour on the extent to which mock jurors were inf...
Body postures can affect how we process and attend to information. Here, a novel effect of adopting ...
Adopting certain body postures can affect how individuals process and attend to social information. ...
Human’s ability to detect deception has an unsettling result of around chance detection (Depaulo et ...
Research in environmental sciences has found that the ergonomic design of human-made env...
Item does not contain fulltextStudies of deception detection traditionally have focused on verbal co...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
A study was conducted to investigate the body movements of participants waiting to be interviewed in...
While making first impressions, personality judgments oftentimes are made based on how that person l...
In forensic investigations, suspects sometimes conceal recognition of a familiar person to protect c...
Recent research has shown that social power systematically influences information processing in many...
Two studies investigated the impact of witness demeanour on the extent to which mock jurors were inf...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
Previous research has indicated that individuals typically perform quite poorly in discerning truths...
Two studies investigated the impact of witness demeanour on the extent to which mock jurors were inf...