Detecting deception in second-language speakers

It is currently unknown how lie detection accuracy is affected when someone is speaking in his or her second language. We examined whether language proficiency had an impact on lie detection. We hypothesized that when judging the veracity of second-language speakers, participants would be better abl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Da Silva, Cayla S.
Other Authors: Leach, Amy-May
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10155/166
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOSHDU.10155-1662013-04-17T04:05:44ZDetecting deception in second-language speakersDa Silva, Cayla S.Deception detectionBilingualismCognitive loadBiasIt is currently unknown how lie detection accuracy is affected when someone is speaking in his or her second language. We examined whether language proficiency had an impact on lie detection. We hypothesized that when judging the veracity of second-language speakers, participants would be better able to discriminate between truth- and lie-tellers and would have bias toward picking ‘lying’ since they may display cues associated with lying when communicating.We collected video footage of native- and second-language English speakers who lied or told the truth about a transgression. Undergraduate students (N = 51) then judged the veracity of these clips and indicated how confident they were in their ratings. Participants were most accurate and confident when judging native-language truth-tellers. In addition, participants were more likely to exhibit a truth-bias when observing native-language speakers, whereas they were more likely to exhibit a lie-bias when viewing second-language speakers. Implications for the justice system will be discussed.UOITLeach, Amy-May2011-09-19T17:02:11Z2011-09-19T17:02:11Z2011-04-01Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10155/166en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Deception detection
Bilingualism
Cognitive load
Bias
spellingShingle Deception detection
Bilingualism
Cognitive load
Bias
Da Silva, Cayla S.
Detecting deception in second-language speakers
description It is currently unknown how lie detection accuracy is affected when someone is speaking in his or her second language. We examined whether language proficiency had an impact on lie detection. We hypothesized that when judging the veracity of second-language speakers, participants would be better able to discriminate between truth- and lie-tellers and would have bias toward picking ‘lying’ since they may display cues associated with lying when communicating.We collected video footage of native- and second-language English speakers who lied or told the truth about a transgression. Undergraduate students (N = 51) then judged the veracity of these clips and indicated how confident they were in their ratings. Participants were most accurate and confident when judging native-language truth-tellers. In addition, participants were more likely to exhibit a truth-bias when observing native-language speakers, whereas they were more likely to exhibit a lie-bias when viewing second-language speakers. Implications for the justice system will be discussed. === UOIT
author2 Leach, Amy-May
author_facet Leach, Amy-May
Da Silva, Cayla S.
author Da Silva, Cayla S.
author_sort Da Silva, Cayla S.
title Detecting deception in second-language speakers
title_short Detecting deception in second-language speakers
title_full Detecting deception in second-language speakers
title_fullStr Detecting deception in second-language speakers
title_full_unstemmed Detecting deception in second-language speakers
title_sort detecting deception in second-language speakers
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10155/166
work_keys_str_mv AT dasilvacaylas detectingdeceptioninsecondlanguagespeakers
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