Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview

An individual's ability to discriminate lies from truth is far from accurate, and is poorly related to an individual's confidence in his/her detection. Both law enforcement and non-professional interviewers base their evaluations of truthfulness on experiential criteria, including emotiona...

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Main Authors: Antonietta Curci, Tiziana Lanciano, Fabiana Battista, Sabrina Guaragno, Raffaella Maria Ribatti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00748/full
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spelling doaj-266e7fb6da9d4d83b6a038cf7a4d7e362020-11-24T21:34:57ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402019-01-01910.3389/fpsyt.2018.00748425043Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped InterviewAntonietta CurciTiziana LancianoFabiana BattistaSabrina GuaragnoRaffaella Maria RibattiAn individual's ability to discriminate lies from truth is far from accurate, and is poorly related to an individual's confidence in his/her detection. Both law enforcement and non-professional interviewers base their evaluations of truthfulness on experiential criteria, including emotional and expressive features, cognitive complexity, and paraverbal aspects of interviewees' reports. The current experimental study adopted two perspectives of investigation: the first is aimed at assessing the ability of naïve judges to detect lies/truth by watching a videotaped interview; the second takes into account the interviewee's detectability as a liar or as telling the truth by a sample of judges. Additionally, this study is intended to evaluate the criteria adopted to support lie/truth detection and relate them with accuracy and confidence of detection. Results showed that judges' detection ability was moderately accurate and associated with a moderate individual sense of confidence, with a slightly better accuracy for truth detection than for lie detection. Detection accuracy appeared to be negatively associated with detection confidence when the interviewee was a liar, and positively associated when the interviewee was a truth-teller. Furthermore, judges were found to support lie detection through criteria concerning emotional features, and to sustain truth detection by taking into account the cognitive complexity and the paucity of expressive manifestations related with the interviewee's report. The present findings have implications for the judicial decision on witnesses' credibility.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00748/fulllie detectiondetection accuracyconfidenceexperiential criteriainterview
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antonietta Curci
Tiziana Lanciano
Fabiana Battista
Sabrina Guaragno
Raffaella Maria Ribatti
spellingShingle Antonietta Curci
Tiziana Lanciano
Fabiana Battista
Sabrina Guaragno
Raffaella Maria Ribatti
Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
Frontiers in Psychiatry
lie detection
detection accuracy
confidence
experiential criteria
interview
author_facet Antonietta Curci
Tiziana Lanciano
Fabiana Battista
Sabrina Guaragno
Raffaella Maria Ribatti
author_sort Antonietta Curci
title Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
title_short Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
title_full Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
title_fullStr Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy, Confidence, and Experiential Criteria for Lie Detection Through a Videotaped Interview
title_sort accuracy, confidence, and experiential criteria for lie detection through a videotaped interview
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2019-01-01
description An individual's ability to discriminate lies from truth is far from accurate, and is poorly related to an individual's confidence in his/her detection. Both law enforcement and non-professional interviewers base their evaluations of truthfulness on experiential criteria, including emotional and expressive features, cognitive complexity, and paraverbal aspects of interviewees' reports. The current experimental study adopted two perspectives of investigation: the first is aimed at assessing the ability of naïve judges to detect lies/truth by watching a videotaped interview; the second takes into account the interviewee's detectability as a liar or as telling the truth by a sample of judges. Additionally, this study is intended to evaluate the criteria adopted to support lie/truth detection and relate them with accuracy and confidence of detection. Results showed that judges' detection ability was moderately accurate and associated with a moderate individual sense of confidence, with a slightly better accuracy for truth detection than for lie detection. Detection accuracy appeared to be negatively associated with detection confidence when the interviewee was a liar, and positively associated when the interviewee was a truth-teller. Furthermore, judges were found to support lie detection through criteria concerning emotional features, and to sustain truth detection by taking into account the cognitive complexity and the paucity of expressive manifestations related with the interviewee's report. The present findings have implications for the judicial decision on witnesses' credibility.
topic lie detection
detection accuracy
confidence
experiential criteria
interview
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00748/full
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