BOTH THE SCIENCE AND THE EVERYDAY PRACTICE OF DETECTING A LIE REST ON THE SAME ASSUMPTION: hidden cognitive states that the liar would like to remain hidden nevertheless influence observable behavior. This assumption has good evidence. The insights of professional interrogators, anecdotal evidence, and body language textbooks have all built up a sizeable catalog of non-verbal cues that have been claimed to distinguish deceptive and truthful behavior. Typically, these cues are discrete, individual behaviors-a hand touching a mouth, the rise of a brow-that distinguish lies from truths solely in terms of their frequency or duration. Research to date has failed to establish any of these non-verbal cues as a reliable marker of deception. Here we...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
We quickly form first impressions about newly encountered people guiding our subsequent behaviour (a...
BOTH THE SCIENCE AND THE EVERYDAY PRACTICE OF DETECTING A LIE REST ON THE SAME ASSUMPTION: hidden co...
Both the science and the everyday practice of detecting a lie rest on the same assumption: hidden co...
Both the science and the everyday practice of detecting a lie rest on the same assumption: hidden co...
We measured the continuous bodily motion of participants as they lied to experimenters. These lies w...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
A study was conducted to investigate the body movements of participants waiting to be interviewed in...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
A persistent question in the deception literature has been the extent to which nonverbal behaviors c...
Do people behave differently when they are lying compared with when they are telling the truth? The ...
The present thesis focuses on two main areas of deception research. The first of these examines the...
This study in-progress explores the relationship between social awareness, deception detection, and ...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
We quickly form first impressions about newly encountered people guiding our subsequent behaviour (a...
BOTH THE SCIENCE AND THE EVERYDAY PRACTICE OF DETECTING A LIE REST ON THE SAME ASSUMPTION: hidden co...
Both the science and the everyday practice of detecting a lie rest on the same assumption: hidden co...
Both the science and the everyday practice of detecting a lie rest on the same assumption: hidden co...
We measured the continuous bodily motion of participants as they lied to experimenters. These lies w...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
A study was conducted to investigate the body movements of participants waiting to be interviewed in...
We present a new signal for detecting deception: full body motion. Previous work on detecting decept...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
A persistent question in the deception literature has been the extent to which nonverbal behaviors c...
Do people behave differently when they are lying compared with when they are telling the truth? The ...
The present thesis focuses on two main areas of deception research. The first of these examines the...
This study in-progress explores the relationship between social awareness, deception detection, and ...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
Studies of the nonverbal correlates of deception tend to examine liars' behaviours as independent fr...
We quickly form first impressions about newly encountered people guiding our subsequent behaviour (a...