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The Art

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The Art & Science of Lie Detection Laura Freberg, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo laura_at_laurafreberg.com – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Art


1
The Art Scienceof Lie Detection
  • Laura Freberg, Ph.D.
  • Professor of Psychology
  • California Polytechnic State University, San Luis
    Obispo
  • laura_at_laurafreberg.com

2
Todays Agenda
  • What is a lie?
  • Why do people lie?
  • When are they easy or hard to catch?
  • How do people telegraph their truthfulness?
  • What are the emerging technologies in lie
    detection?
  • A quick video of body language during a lie

3
What Is a Lie?
  • According to the American Heritage Dictionary, a
    lie is
  • 1. A false statement deliberately presented as
    being true a falsehood.
  • 2. Something meant to deceive or give a wrong
    impression.
  • Note the emphasis on the persons intent.

4
Types of Lies
  • Protective lies Telling children that the
    stork brought them because you dont think
    theyre old enough to talk about sex, or
    reassuring your relative that he/she is not
    really terminally ill
  • White lies Lies that do no harm, and may do
    good, such as complimenting your hostess meal
    even if you didnt enjoy it much (social tact)
  • Lying by omission Failing to reveal ones belief
    in order to deceive.
  • Bluffing Usually considered more of a tactic
    than a lie, as it occurs in the well-understood
    context of a game.

5
More Types of Lies.
  • Jest When we use sarcasm or tell tall tales, we
    assume others understand we are deliberately not
    telling the truth.
  • Careful Speaking Avoiding the telling of an
    outright lie with carefully chosen words a
    half-answer that is accurate but does not fully
    answer a question.

6
The Morality of Lying
  • Many philosophers (e.g. Kant, Thomas Aquinas)
    prohibited ALL lying, even if it meant death.
  • Lying is a misuse of the human faculty of speech.
  • Lying undermines trust, which is essential to the
    community.
  • Lying undermines others Lying makes a decision
    for the other person, rather than letting him/her
    decide based on facts.
  • Others defend lying, such as telling a Nazi
    soldier that one has no Jewish children in the
    house.

7
Why Do We Lie?
  • We are not alone. Deception is common in the
    animal kingdom. All animals (including us)
    deceive others to obtain benefits or avoid costs.

8
Lying in Animals
  • Koko, the female gorilla who uses American Sign
    Language, signed cat did it, when confronted
    with a sink she had damaged during a tantrum. It
    is not clear whether or not Koko was making a
    joke or lying.
  • Wolves often bluff during ritual fighting that
    maintains the hierarchy within the pack.

9
The Development of Lying
  • The ability is universal.
  • Children demonstrate Theory of Mind at about
    the age of 4 years. Simultaneously, they are
    capable of lying effectively.
  • The ability to lie precedes a moral understanding
    about the importance of honesty. Consequently,
    children lie frequently until they learn that
    this results in negative consequences.
  • Adults probably lie as frequently as children,
    but about different things.

10
Even Robots Will Learn to Deceive
  • Laurent Kellers robots react to theenvironment
    with a computerized genome.
  • Bots that find food mate with other successful
    bots and send their genome into the next
    generation. Bots can turn blue lights on and
    off.
  • Bots evolved the ability to communicate with
    lights. Some flashed their lights near food,
    while others flashed their lights near poison.
  • Bots gave correct information to relatives,
    but flashed their lights far away from food when
    surrounded by strangers.

11
Catching a Liar
  • Liars will look different ONLY when the following
    two conditions are fully met
  • The person is deliberately and knowingly telling
    a lie.
  • The person thinks lying is wrong.

12
Reconstructive Memory
  • When we retrieve information from memory to use
    it, the data are at risk for change. The person
    retrieving changed, inaccurate information will
    believe that he/she is telling the truth.
  • Elizabeth Loftus and Eyewitness Testimony
  • Loftus (1975)
  • N150
  • Video of an automobile accident
  • IV
  • How fast was the white sports car going when it
    passed the barn while traveling along the
    country road?
  • How fast was the white sports car going while
    traveling along the country road?
  • DV measured one week later
  • Did you see a barn?

13
Loftus Results
14
When People Dont Care.
  • People who do not believe that lying is wrong
    will show few, if any, detectable signs of
    arousal.
  • Psychopaths, criminal or not, are incapable of
    empathy or guilt. Therefore, they do not perceive
    that harming others is a problem, and will be
    effective liars.

15
Signs That a Person Is Lying
  • Detecting lies in people you know is FAR easier
    than detecting lies in a stranger. When dealing
    with strangers, use baseline questions that
    nobody would lie about to establish normal
    behavior.
  • Assuming a person is deliberately lying AND
    recognizes lying as negative, you may observe
    some/all of the following
  • Reduced articulation
  • Facial and body responses that do not match
  • Facial and body responses that pass quickly are
    are replaced by more conscious responses

16
More Signs of Lying
  1. Reduced upper body movement
  2. Increased lower body movement
  3. Nervous smiling or laughter that is inappropriate
    given the topic under discussion (smiling is a
    submissive signalIm okay, dont hurt me)
  4. Eye contact (works in the generic American
    culture, but few others)
  5. Timing Emotions are spontaneous, instantaneous
    reactions to our environment. Any delay in
    reaction should be suspect.

17
Traditional Lie Detector Tests
  • Polygraph tests are reliable about 65 of the
    time, even when conducted by experts.
    Consequently, they are not admissible in court.

18
Other Tech Efforts
  • Truth serum
  • Brain fingerprinting
  • fMRI
  • Brain activity during the processing of real
    memories and imagined events is identical.
  • fMRI requires cooperation (no moving)
  • Cannot detect lies by omission
  • CAN detect if a person is thinking about a place
    versus a face
  • CAN detect extra brain activity required by lying

19
Other Challenges for fMRI
  • Small number of participants
  • Generally typical, law-abiding participants
    without psychopathology
  • Can we generalize from the laboratory (no risk)
    to the courtroom (huge risk)?

Lying
Truth
20
Ethics of New Technologies
  • Technology generally moves much faster than
    corresponding discussions of ethics.
  • What if we can read the brain? How should that
    be used? What protections should we have for
    participants?

21
Thank you! Any Questions?
  • Feel free to email me
  • laura_at_laurafreberg.com
  • Or
  • visit me on the web at
  • http//www.laurafreberg.com
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