1 / 29

Suspects , Lies and Videotape: An Analysis of Authentic High-Stake Liars

Mann, Vrij & Bull. Suspects , Lies and Videotape: An Analysis of Authentic High-Stake Liars. When people are lying … What behaviours do you expect them to have ?. Background and context. Most people think that , when lying , people : Avoid eye contact

pia
Download Presentation

Suspects , Lies and Videotape: An Analysis of Authentic High-Stake Liars

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mann, Vrij & Bull Suspects, Lies and Videotape: AnAnalysis of AuthenticHigh-StakeLiars

  2. Whenpeople are lying… Whatbehaviours do youexpectthemtohave?

  3. Background and context • Mostpeoplethinkthat, whenlying, people: • Avoideyecontact • Increasefidgetingnervousmovements • Nervousmovements • Previousresearch mostpeopledecrease in non functionalmovements and becomeunnaturallystill. • Thereis no relationshipbetweeneyecontact and deception

  4. Background and context • Untilnow labexperimentshaverequiredparticipantstotell a lie orthetruthaboutbeliefs and opinions. • Butsome of thesesettingsdifferfrom real lifesettings not generalizable

  5. Background and context Why do thesekind of experiments are notrepresentative? 1. Participantisaskedto lie - Someexperimentershaveallowedparticipantstochooseiflyingortellingthetruth butthe lie istold “forthe sake of theexperiment”.

  6. Background and context 2. Participantswillusuallybevideotaped and theyknowtheirlying/truthbehaviourwillbelateranalysedbysomeone 3. Tellinglies of negligibleconsequence unethicaltoofferpunishmentforlying. *So thereisstill a possibilitythathigh-stakeliars are more nervous and performnervousbehaviours.

  7. Background and context • So, toaddressallthesepoints, anotherstudywasdesignedtoanalysebehaviours of spontaneousliars. • Where? Policedepartment high-stakesituationswithsuspects.

  8. Background and context • Verydifficultto catch non-verbal behaviour in peoplewho lie. • Vrij & Mann (2001) analysed video tapes of murderers– lots of insightintothetopic. • Liarsmaynotdisplaynervousbehavioursbecausethey are probablyexperiencingotherprocessessimultaneously increasedcognitiveload orattemptedbehavioural control. • These, couldnegatenervousbehaviours

  9. Background and context Otherpointstobeconsidered: 1. Liars in thisstudywillprobablyhavetothinkhardtomaketheirliesconvincing orotherwise sentence

  10. Background and context *Peopleinvolved in complexcognitivetasksmakefewermovements: - Fewerillustrators: arm and handmovements are designedtosupplementspeech - Self-manipulations (scratching, etc) - Othersubtlehandmovements. *Increase in cognitive load results in: - A neglect of bodylanguage, reducingoverallmovements. - Increasedspeechdisturbances- Longer pauses beforeananswer - Eye-blinksuppression

  11. Background and context 2. Liarsoften try to control theirbehaviour in ordertogive a credibleimpressiontotheinterviewer. • “Motivationalimpairment”: (DePaulo&Kirkendol): thehigherthemotivationtosucceed in the lie, thegreaterthelikelihoodthatliarswill try to control theirbehaviour. • Thereis a strongbeliefthatliarsusuallymoveawaytheirgaze and makenervousmovements, so liarswill try tomantaineyecontact and avoidmovements. cultural stereotype of liars.

  12. Background and context Howdoesthishappen? Cultural belief Excesive control Notaware of bodylanguage Overzealous control Deliberatemovements and rigidity

  13. Background and context • Summary: no single pattern of behaviourisrelatedtodeception. • Pinocchio’sgrowingnosedoesn’texist • Wealsoneedtoconsider individual differences.

  14. METHOD: Participants • 16 policesuspects (13 males, 3 females= • 4 juveniles: 3 aged 13, 1 aged 15 • 15 caucasian (english), 1 asian • All interviews were done in english • Crimes: • Theft (9) • Arson (2) • Attempted rape (1) • Murder (4)

  15. PROCEDURE • Police detectives Kent County, UK • Recollection of videotaped interviews wheresuspecthad lied at somepoint and toldthetruth at another (serious cases) • Experimentedinvestigated files toconfirmifsubjectswerelyingortellingthetruth

  16. PROCEDURE • Suspectsdeny evidenceisshowntothem theyconfess. • Results: 16 clips of subjects • Truths and lieshadtobe of thesamenature (aboutevents, not personal detailsfor ex)

  17. PROCEDURE • Number of clips per participantvaried • Foreachparticipant, min 2 clips: 1 truth, 1 lie • Vrij & Winkel: differencesbetweenlying and truth-tellingbehaviour are independent of length of the clip

  18. Dependent variables • 2 observersindependentlycoded 8 behaviours • Recorderswhere(single) blindtotruth/lie variable and aim/hypothesis • Interraterreliability inter observer • Ideally 2 observerscodedeverything, butethically, theleastpossiblepeopletocode.

  19. Dependent variables • Behavioursobserved: • Gazeaversion (secondsparticipantlookedaway) • Blinking (frequency) • Head movements (frequency of head nods) • Self-manipulations (frequency) • Illustrators (freq of arm/handmovement) • Hand/fingermovements (frequency) • Speechdisturbances • Pauses (seconds) *Strongconsistencybetween 2 coders

  20. Dependent variable • The total length per minute of footageforeachbehaviourwascalculated. • Result: 1 truth-telling score, 1 lie-telling score foreachbehaviour, foreachparticipant.

  21. RESULTS • Lyingwasaccompaniedby a decrease in blinking and anincrease in pauses. • As expected, individual differencesdidoccurand therewas no behaviourthatallliarsexhibited • 50% showedincreased head movements and 50% a decrease. • 56% showed more gazeaversion and 44% showedlessgazeaversion

  22. RESULTS • 69% showed a decrease in hand and armmovementduringdeception • 33% showedanincrease. • Mostreliableindicator of deception: blinking and pauses: • 81% pausedlonger • 81% blinkedless

  23. DISCUSSION • Thisstudy has themostextensivewhich has examineddeceptivebehaviour in real-life, in high-stakessetting. • 2 significantdifferencesoccured: • Suspectsblinkedless and pausedlongerwhilelying.

  24. DISCUSSION • Somesupportforthecognitive load processlessblinking and longer pauses possibleindicators of cognitive load • Blinking strongestindicationthatcognitive load affects more suspects’ behaviourthannervousness

  25. DISCUSSION • Nixon effect: increase in blinking (he blinked more than 50 times/min duringresignation) • However, increasedcognitive load results in a decrease in blinking, butconclusions are speculative (no methodology)

  26. DISCUSSION • Large individual differenceswereshown probably no typicallyingbehaviourexists. • Probablythemostreliableindicator of deception change in theindividual’s normal behaviour

  27. DISCUSSION: Limitations • 1. Differentinterviewerswereusedfordifferentparticipants • 2. Sometomes more thanoneinterviewerwaspresent • 3. The total number of peoplepresent, varieddependingonthenumber of interviewers, attorney, etc. • In thisstudy, experimentersmanagedto control thisfactors.

  28. DISCUSSION • Researcherscan’tbesurethatthe clips thattheycomparedwere comparable • Theydidn’t compare high-stakeliarstopeoplewho are tryingtopleadtheirinnocencewhenfalselyaccused. • Theexperimenterscouldn’tobtainsuchfootage.

  29. DISCUSSION • Bothliars and truthtellersmightexperience similar behaviour • 16 participantsisnot a largesample • Differencebetweenthissample and thewholepopulation limitationforgeneralizability.

More Related