How People Really Suspect and Discover Lies

被引:0
|
作者
Eric Novotny
Zachary Carr
Mark G. Frank
S. B. Dietrich
Timothy Shaddock
Megan Cardwell
Andrea Decker
机构
[1] Michigan State University,Department of Communication
[2] University at Buffalo,Department of Communication
[3] The State University of New York,undefined
[4] University at Buffalo,undefined
[5] The State University of New York,undefined
来源
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior | 2018年 / 42卷
关键词
Deception; Nonverbal cues; Lying; Discovering; Suspecting;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Previous research suggested that real-world lies are detected through hard evidence, such as physical evidence or a direct confession, and not via nonverbal clues. However, we argue that discovering a lie is a process, and nonverbal clues are an important source of information that can induce suspicion, which then triggers the search for hard evidence. We replicated an original study suggesting the irrelevance of nonverbal clues, but experimentally manipulated the wording of the critical question as ‘discovering’ a lie versus ‘suspecting’ a lie. A second study was conducted that further manipulated the phrasing to ask about ‘events’ versus ‘clues’ that led one to detect the lie. Results of both studies showed that those asked about suspecting a lie cited nonverbal behaviors significantly more often than those asked about discovering a lie. Thus, in contrast to previous research, these findings suggest the importance of behavioral clues (e.g. verbal and nonverbal behavior), specifically in the early stage of lie detection.
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页码:41 / 52
页数:11
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