Results 231 to 240 of about 60,899 (292)

The Detection of Deception

Neurologic Clinics, 1995
In clinical situations patient honesty and self-interest usually coincide; however, in legal circumstances patients may be motivated to deceive and may be skilled in doing so. Research raises doubts about the capacity of health professionals to detect malingering, particularly when there is less known about conditions or expected symptom patterns, more
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The Impact of Culture in Deception and Deception Detection

2021
This chapter examines the role of culture in deception. It opens by explaining how culture has been measured in the research literature, along with the consequences and critiques of those measurement strategies. Next, it explores how culture has been studied previously in the context of deception and addresses variations in those analyses such as ...
Matt Giles   +3 more
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Deception and Deception Detection: The Role of Cross‐Modal Inconsistency

Journal of Personality, 1998
The authors investigated whether observers infer others’ credibility from the consistency of their visible and audible characteristics, and whether such inferences are justified. In Study 1, target persons were videotaped while reading a standard text; in Study 2, target persons were videotaped while lying or telling the truth.
C U, Heinrich, P, Borkenau
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Detection of Deception

2018
Much research has examined people’s ability to correctly distinguish between honest and deceptive communication. The ability to detect deception is useful, but many misconceptions about effective lie detection have been documented. Research on deception is especially informative because the findings of research often contradict common sense.
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Detecting Deception in Intelligent Systems I: Activation of Deception Detection Tactics

2004
The continued research, development and acceptance of intelligent systems for diagnosis and decision support has uncovered many practical considerations for the interaction of intelligent, autonomous agents. One such consideration is the possibility of an agent intentionally transmitting misinformation to other agents or to a human decision maker to ...
Gregory Johnson, Eugene Santos
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Nonverbal Detection of Deception

2017
Throughout history it has been assumed that lying is accompanied by specific nonverbal behaviors; various sources still claim that nonverbal behavior is very revealing about deception. Systematic research, however, examining nonverbal cues to deceit has shown that nonverbal cues to deceit are faint and unreliable.
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Alcohol and the Psychophysiological Detection of Deception

Psychophysiology, 1984
ABSTRACTPsychophysiological detection of deception examinations were conducted on 40 subjects. Of these, 32 were “guilty” of a mock crime and 8 were innocent. Sixteen guilty subjects committed the crime while intoxicated and the remaining 16 committed the crime sober.
M T, Bradley, D, Ainsworth
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