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Bettens, Talley; Warren, Amye R. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Police officers are often trained to use the Behavior Analysis Interview (BAI) to detect deceit, but it is based on faulty indicators of lying that may be especially problematic for juveniles due to developmental immaturities. Juveniles, young adults, and adults were assigned to guilt or innocence conditions, read a criminal scenario, and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Young Adults, Adults, Beliefs
Deeb, Haneen; Vrij, Aldert; Leal, Sharon; Fallon, Mark; Mann, Samantha; Luther, Kirk; Granhag, Pär Anders – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Sketching while narrating involves describing an event while sketching on a blank paper (self-generated sketch) or on a printed map. We compared the effects of self-generated sketches and printed maps on information elicitation and lie detection. Participants (N = 211) carried out a mock mission and were instructed to tell the truth or to lie…
Descriptors: Cues, Deception, Freehand Drawing, Narration
Vrij, Aldert; Jupe, Louise Marie; Leal, Sharon; Vernham, Zarah; Nahari, Galit – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Sham marriages occur frequently, and to detect them, partners are sometimes interviewed together. We examined an innovative method to detect deceit in such interviews. Fifty-three pairs of interviewees, either friends (truth tellers) or pretended to be friends (liars), were interviewed about their friendship. Just before the interview, they…
Descriptors: Interviews, Deception, Marriage, Identification
Vrij, Aldert; Leal, Sharon; Deeb, Haneen; Chan, Stephanie; Khader, Majeed; Chai, Whistine; Chin, Jeffery – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Due to time constraints, interviews aimed to detect deception in airport settings should be brief and veracity assessments should be made in real time. In two experiments carried out in the departure hall of an international airport, truth tellers were asked to report truthfully their forthcoming trip, whereas liars were asked to lie about the…
Descriptors: Deception, Air Transportation, Evaluation, Cues
Vrij, Aldert; Leal, Sharon; Fisher, Ronald P.; Mann, Samantha; Jo, Eunkyung; Shaboltas, Alla; Khaleeva, Maria; Granskaya, Juliana; Houston, Kate – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
As interviewees typically say less when an interpreter is present, we examined whether this was caused by interpreters not interpreting everything interviewees say or by interviewees providing less information. We further examined (a) the effect of a model drawing on providing information and (b) the diagnostic value of total details and the…
Descriptors: Cues, Questioning Techniques, Deception, Freehand Drawing
Harvey, Adam Charles; Vrij, Aldert; Sarikas, George; Leal, Sharon; Jupe, Louise; Nahari, Galit – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
The verifiability approach (VA) is a lie-detection tool that examines reported checkable details. Across two studies, we attempt to exploit liar's preferred strategy of repeating information by examining the effect of questioning adult interviewees before the VA. In Study 1, truth tellers (n = 34) and liars (n = 33) were randomly assigned to…
Descriptors: Deception, Identification, Credibility, Interviews
Leal, Sharon; Vrij, Aldert; Vernham, Zarah; Dalton, Gary; Jupe, Louise Marie; Nahari, Galit; Rozmann, Nir – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
Leal, Vrij, Deeb, and Jupe (2018) found--with British participants--that a model statement elicited (a) more information and (b) a cue to deceit: After exposure to a model statement, liars reported significantly more peripheral information than truth tellers. We sought to replicate these findings with Arabs living in Israel. Truth tellers and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Arabs, Deception, Models
Leach, Amy-May; Da Silva, Cayla S.; Connors, Christina J.; Vrantsidis, Michael R. T.; Meissner, Christian A.; Kassin, Saul M. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
We examined whether observers' beliefs about deception were affected by a speaker's language proficiency. Laypersons (N = 105) and police officers (N = 75) indicated which nonverbal and verbal behaviors were predictive of native versus non-native speakers' deception. In addition, they provided their beliefs about these speakers' interrogation…
Descriptors: Deception, Native Speakers, Second Languages, Language Proficiency
Vrij, Aldert; Leal, Sharon; Mann, Samantha; Fisher, Ronald P.; Dalton, Gary; Jo, Eunkyung; Shaboltas, Alla; Khaleeva, Maria; Granskaya, Juliana; Houston, Kate – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
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,…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Cues, Deception, Interviews
Connolly, Deborah A.; Gordon, Heidi M.; Woiwod, Dayna M.; Price, Heather L. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
This research examined whether a memorable and unexpected change (deviation details) presented during 1 instance of a repeated event facilitated children's memory for that instance and whether a repeated event facilitated children's memory for deviation details. In Experiments 1 and 2, 8-year-olds (N = 167) watched 1 or 4 live magic shows.…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Memory, Experiments, Young Children
Moffitt, Kevin Christopher – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The three objectives of this dissertation were to develop a question type model for predicting linguistic features of responses to interview questions, create a tool for linguistic analysis of documents, and use lexical bundle analysis to identify linguistic differences between fraudulent and non-fraudulent financial reports. First, The Moffitt…
Descriptors: Cues, Verbs, Natural Language Processing, Discriminant Analysis
Burgoon, Judee K.; Blair, J. Pete; Strom, Renee E. – Human Communication Research, 2008
In potentially deceptive situations, people rely on mental shortcuts to help process information. These heuristic judgments are often biased and result in inaccurate assessments of sender veracity. Four such biases--truth bias, visual bias, demeanor bias, and expectancy violation bias--were examined in a judgment experiment that varied nonverbal…
Descriptors: Cues, Interpersonal Communication, Bias, Nonverbal Communication
Einav, Shiri; Hood, Bruce M. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
This study examined whether the well-documented adult tendency to perceive gaze aversion as a lying cue is also evident in children. In Experiment 1, 6-year-olds, 9-year-olds, and adults were shown video vignettes of speakers who either maintained or avoided eye contact while answering an interviewer's questions. Participants evaluated whether the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Nonverbal Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Gender Differences

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