using actors is a hard way to tell since you need a baseline for each individual. plus anxiety, context, lack of rapport and other factors play a huge role
The interviewer shouldn't ask compound questions, interrupt the subject, prompt or feed the subject language. He should allow them to speak freely using their own words.
All of them moved their eyes to the right and up. :) That is usually easiest way to figure out someone is lying since they are accessing the fantasy and creativity part of the brain.
@@hydroboostoxiaction6271 instead of focussing on non-verbal cues, verbal cues are way better. Wrote a thesis exactly about this topic. This is a conflicting one because even police officers get told very often to use cues like eyes, eventgough its wrong. The less detailed a story, the more likely it is ro be a lie. The more time switches in a story, the more likely it is to be a lie. Non-verbal cues are more often caused by nervousness that arises in police interrogations and not a sign of lies
Is laughing, looking down or repeating the same sentences a sign of lying? Is saying a firm yes then staring , then saying 'if... ' and not giving any further information but asking information a sign of lying?
using actors is a hard way to tell since you need a baseline for each individual. plus anxiety, context, lack of rapport and other factors play a huge role
The interviewer shouldn't ask compound questions, interrupt the subject, prompt or feed the subject language. He should allow them to speak freely using their own words.
All of them moved their eyes to the right and up. :) That is usually easiest way to figure out someone is lying since they are accessing the fantasy and creativity part of the brain.
Thats totally wrong and sadly a very common myth.
@@paull3329 really? What is the right way then?
@@hydroboostoxiaction6271 instead of focussing on non-verbal cues, verbal cues are way better. Wrote a thesis exactly about this topic. This is a conflicting one because even police officers get told very often to use cues like eyes, eventgough its wrong. The less detailed a story, the more likely it is ro be a lie. The more time switches in a story, the more likely it is to be a lie. Non-verbal cues are more often caused by nervousness that arises in police interrogations and not a sign of lies
Is laughing, looking down or repeating the same sentences a sign of lying? Is saying a firm yes then staring , then saying 'if... ' and not giving any further information but asking information a sign of lying?
@@Amit_KumarSingh8 just one tell doesnt mean theyre lying, a cluster of deceptive tells is what you want to look for
You must be aware that when a lawyer is asked a personal question, they evade answering, everything! So are they all liars🏹⚖️🤔