Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.

This study examined 105 magistrates’ beliefs about verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception/truth-telling and whether their amount of courtroom experience was associated with their beliefs. Previous surveys (none have been on magistrates) suggest that people tend to associate othe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ray Bull, Andrew Brownsell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Española de Psicología Jurídica y Forense 2011-01-01
Series:European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context
Subjects:
Online Access:http://webs.uvigo.es/sepjf/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=33&Itemid=110&lang=en
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spelling doaj-b49109bfc33b4c36bb51f7914effa83f2020-11-25T00:59:37ZengSociedad Española de Psicología Jurídica y ForenseEuropean Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context1889-18611989-40072011-01-01312946Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.Ray BullAndrew BrownsellThis study examined 105 magistrates’ beliefs about verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception/truth-telling and whether their amount of courtroom experience was associated with their beliefs. Previous surveys (none have been on magistrates) suggest that people tend to associate others’ deception with changes in a number of verbal and non-verbal behaviours (that research on actual lying has found not to be valid cues). Overall, the magistrates’ beliefs were not similar to those found in previous surveys; for the majority of behaviours tested, the magisterial sample did not consensually consider that these were indicative of deception/truth-telling. Magisterial experience was related to only six of the 61 survey items, with less experienced magistrates tending to believe that four of the behaviours were possible indicators of deception. Given that the majority of magistrates did not share the common false beliefs found in other studies, the main implication of the present study is that they may well be less likely to incorrectly discriminate between witnesses/defendants who are telling the truth and those who are lying.http://webs.uvigo.es/sepjf/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=33&Itemid=110&lang=enBeliefsDeceptionMagistratesOpinionsCredibility.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ray Bull
Andrew Brownsell
spellingShingle Ray Bull
Andrew Brownsell
Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context
Beliefs
Deception
Magistrates
Opinions
Credibility.
author_facet Ray Bull
Andrew Brownsell
author_sort Ray Bull
title Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
title_short Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
title_full Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
title_fullStr Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
title_full_unstemmed Magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
title_sort magistrates’ beliefs concerning verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception.
publisher Sociedad Española de Psicología Jurídica y Forense
series European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context
issn 1889-1861
1989-4007
publishDate 2011-01-01
description This study examined 105 magistrates’ beliefs about verbal and non-verbal behaviours as indicators of deception/truth-telling and whether their amount of courtroom experience was associated with their beliefs. Previous surveys (none have been on magistrates) suggest that people tend to associate others’ deception with changes in a number of verbal and non-verbal behaviours (that research on actual lying has found not to be valid cues). Overall, the magistrates’ beliefs were not similar to those found in previous surveys; for the majority of behaviours tested, the magisterial sample did not consensually consider that these were indicative of deception/truth-telling. Magisterial experience was related to only six of the 61 survey items, with less experienced magistrates tending to believe that four of the behaviours were possible indicators of deception. Given that the majority of magistrates did not share the common false beliefs found in other studies, the main implication of the present study is that they may well be less likely to incorrectly discriminate between witnesses/defendants who are telling the truth and those who are lying.
topic Beliefs
Deception
Magistrates
Opinions
Credibility.
url http://webs.uvigo.es/sepjf/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=33&Itemid=110&lang=en
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