We examined whether speech-related differences between truth tellers and liars are more profound when answering unexpected questions than when answering expected questions. We also examined whether the presence of an interpreter affected these results. In the experiment, 204 participants from the United States (Hispanic participants only), Russia, and the Republic of Korea were interviewed in their native language by a native-speaking interviewer or by a British interviewer through an interpreter. Truth tellers discussed a trip that they had made during the last 12 months; liars fabricated a story about such a trip. The key dependent variables were the amount of information provided and the proportion of all statements that were complicatio...
The current study set out to replicate and expand the results of a study by Pruss (2007) which found...
Purpose: Lie‐tellers tend to tell embedded lies within interviews. In the context of intelligence‐ga...
Previous research suggests that lie detection can be improved by asking the interviewee unexpected q...
We examined how the presence of an interpreter during an interview affects eliciting information and...
The present experiment examined how the seating position of an interpreter during investigative inte...
We examined how the presence of an interpreter during an interview affects eliciting information and...
The article presents the results of the Russian part of the international research, conducted in St....
We tested the effect of sketching while providing a narrative on eliciting information, eliciting cu...
Purpose. Unexpected questions have been shown to increase cues to deception, without reducing the in...
The present study investigated whether measurable verbal differences occur when people vocalize thei...
<div>Poster presented at the 2017 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.</div><div><br></div><div>...
The current study set out to replicate and expand the results of a study by Pruss (2007) which found...
Asking unanticipated questions in investigative interviews can elicit differences in the verbal beha...
Previous research suggests that lie detection can be improved by asking the interviewee unexpected q...
Introduction: The verbal deception literature is largely based upon North American and Western Europ...
The current study set out to replicate and expand the results of a study by Pruss (2007) which found...
Purpose: Lie‐tellers tend to tell embedded lies within interviews. In the context of intelligence‐ga...
Previous research suggests that lie detection can be improved by asking the interviewee unexpected q...
We examined how the presence of an interpreter during an interview affects eliciting information and...
The present experiment examined how the seating position of an interpreter during investigative inte...
We examined how the presence of an interpreter during an interview affects eliciting information and...
The article presents the results of the Russian part of the international research, conducted in St....
We tested the effect of sketching while providing a narrative on eliciting information, eliciting cu...
Purpose. Unexpected questions have been shown to increase cues to deception, without reducing the in...
The present study investigated whether measurable verbal differences occur when people vocalize thei...
<div>Poster presented at the 2017 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.</div><div><br></div><div>...
The current study set out to replicate and expand the results of a study by Pruss (2007) which found...
Asking unanticipated questions in investigative interviews can elicit differences in the verbal beha...
Previous research suggests that lie detection can be improved by asking the interviewee unexpected q...
Introduction: The verbal deception literature is largely based upon North American and Western Europ...
The current study set out to replicate and expand the results of a study by Pruss (2007) which found...
Purpose: Lie‐tellers tend to tell embedded lies within interviews. In the context of intelligence‐ga...
Previous research suggests that lie detection can be improved by asking the interviewee unexpected q...