The focal account: Indirect lie detection need not access unconscious, implicit knowledge.
نویسندگان
چکیده
People are poor lie detectors, but accuracy can be improved by making the judgment indirectly. In a typical demonstration, participants are not told that the experiment is about deception at all. Instead, they judge whether the speaker appears, say, tense or not. Surprisingly, these indirect judgments better reflect the speaker's veracity. A common explanation is that participants have an implicit awareness of deceptive behavior, even when they cannot explicitly identify it. We propose an alternative explanation. Attending to a range of behaviors, as explicit raters do, can lead to conflict: A speaker may be thinking hard (indicating deception) but not tense (indicating honesty). In 2 experiments, we show that the judgment (and in turn the correct classification rate) is the result of attending to a single behavior, as indirect raters are instructed to do. Indirect lie detection does not access implicit knowledge, but simply focuses the perceiver on more useful cues.
منابع مشابه
Wanted: direct comparisons of unconscious and conscious lie detection.
Commentary We are thankful to Levine and Bond (2014) for engaging in a much-needed discussion about the accuracy of human lie detection. As we understand their Commentary, they make two primary, and related, arguments. Their first argument is that the significant difference that we reported (ten Brinke, Stimson, & Carney, 2014) between conscious, direct and unconscious, indirect truth/lie discr...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of experimental psychology. Applied
دوره 21 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015