Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.

Meta-analytic findings indicate that the success of unmasking a deceptive interaction relies more on the performance of the liar than on that of the lie detector. Despite this finding, the lie characteristics and strategies of deception that enable good liars to evade detection are largely unknown....

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Main Authors: Brianna L Verigin, Ewout H Meijer, Glynis Bogaard, Aldert Vrij
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225566
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spelling doaj-4e4484242cad4573aaff502b11cea0652021-03-03T21:23:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022556610.1371/journal.pone.0225566Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.Brianna L VeriginEwout H MeijerGlynis BogaardAldert VrijMeta-analytic findings indicate that the success of unmasking a deceptive interaction relies more on the performance of the liar than on that of the lie detector. Despite this finding, the lie characteristics and strategies of deception that enable good liars to evade detection are largely unknown. We conducted a survey (n = 194) to explore the association between laypeople's self-reported ability to deceive on the one hand, and their lie prevalence, characteristics, and deception strategies in daily life on the other. Higher self-reported ratings of deception ability were positively correlated with self-reports of telling more lies per day, telling inconsequential lies, lying to colleagues and friends, and communicating lies via face-to-face interactions. We also observed that self-reported good liars highly relied on verbal strategies of deception and they most commonly reported to i) embed their lies into truthful information, ii) keep the statement clear and simple, and iii) provide a plausible account. This study provides a starting point for future research exploring the meta-cognitions and patterns of skilled liars who may be most likely to evade detection.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225566
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brianna L Verigin
Ewout H Meijer
Glynis Bogaard
Aldert Vrij
spellingShingle Brianna L Verigin
Ewout H Meijer
Glynis Bogaard
Aldert Vrij
Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Brianna L Verigin
Ewout H Meijer
Glynis Bogaard
Aldert Vrij
author_sort Brianna L Verigin
title Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
title_short Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
title_full Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
title_fullStr Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
title_full_unstemmed Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
title_sort lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Meta-analytic findings indicate that the success of unmasking a deceptive interaction relies more on the performance of the liar than on that of the lie detector. Despite this finding, the lie characteristics and strategies of deception that enable good liars to evade detection are largely unknown. We conducted a survey (n = 194) to explore the association between laypeople's self-reported ability to deceive on the one hand, and their lie prevalence, characteristics, and deception strategies in daily life on the other. Higher self-reported ratings of deception ability were positively correlated with self-reports of telling more lies per day, telling inconsequential lies, lying to colleagues and friends, and communicating lies via face-to-face interactions. We also observed that self-reported good liars highly relied on verbal strategies of deception and they most commonly reported to i) embed their lies into truthful information, ii) keep the statement clear and simple, and iii) provide a plausible account. This study provides a starting point for future research exploring the meta-cognitions and patterns of skilled liars who may be most likely to evade detection.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225566
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