Search Results - "Meijer, Ewout"
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Strong, but Wrong: Lay People's and Police Officers' Beliefs about Verbal and Nonverbal Cues to Deception
Published in PloS one (03-06-2016)“…The present study investigated the beliefs of students and police officers about cues to deception. A total of 95 police officers and 104 undergraduate…”
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2
Detainee and layperson's expectations and preferences regarding police interview rooms
Published in PloS one (12-11-2020)“…Emerging research on how suspects perceive the physical environment during investigative interviews yields contrasting findings. While previous studies have…”
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3
Lie prevalence, lie characteristics and strategies of self-reported good liars
Published in PloS one (03-12-2019)“…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…”
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4
Memory detection with the Concealed Information Test: A meta analysis of skin conductance, respiration, heart rate, and P300 data
Published in Psychophysiology (01-09-2014)“…The Concealed Information Test (CIT) uses psychophysiological measures to determine the presence or absence of crime‐related information in a suspect's memory…”
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5
No evidence that instructions to ignore nonverbal cues improve deception detection accuracy
Published in Applied cognitive psychology (01-05-2022)“…Research has consistently shown people predominantly rely on undiagnostic nonverbal cues when detecting deceit, whereas verbal cues are more accurate. In three…”
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Deception detection with behavioral, autonomic, and neural measures: Conceptual and methodological considerations that warrant modesty
Published in Psychophysiology (01-05-2016)“…The detection of deception has attracted increased attention among psychological researchers, legal scholars, and ethicists during the last decade. Much of…”
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7
Detecting false intentions using unanticipated questions
Published in PloS one (11-12-2019)“…The present study investigated whether measurable verbal differences occur when people vocalize their true and false intentions. To test potential differences,…”
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8
Detecting deception using comparable truth baselines
Published in Psychology, crime & law (03-07-2023)“…Baselining - comparing the statements of interest to a known truthful statement by the same individual - has been suggested to improve lie detection accuracy…”
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9
The concealed information test with a continuously moving stimulus
Published in Psychophysiology (01-11-2024)“…The Concealed Information Test (CIT) aims to extract concealed crime-related knowledge using physiological measures. In the present study, we propose a new…”
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10
Embedding lies into truthful stories does not affect their quality
Published in Applied cognitive psychology (01-03-2020)“…Summary When given the opportunity, liars will embed their lies into otherwise truthful statements. In what way this embedding affects the quality of lies,…”
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11
Self‐Reported Beliefs About Verbal Cues Correlate with Deception‐Detection Performance
Published in Applied cognitive psychology (01-01-2018)“…Summary In this study, we investigated whether people who hold more correct beliefs about verbal cues to deception are also better lie detectors. We…”
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Does Honesty Require Time? Two Preregistered Direct Replications of Experiment 2 of Shalvi, Eldar, and Bereby-Meyer (2012)
Published in Psychological science (01-04-2020)“…Shalvi, Eldar, and Bereby-Meyer (2012) found across two studies (N = 72 for each) that time pressure increased cheating. These findings suggest that dishonesty…”
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13
Orienting versus inhibition in the Concealed Information Test: Different cognitive processes drive different physiological measures
Published in Psychophysiology (01-04-2016)“…The Concealed Information Test (CIT) provides a valid tool for psychophysiological detection of concealed knowledge. However, its precise theoretical…”
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14
A comparable truth baseline improves truth/lie discrimination
Published in Applied cognitive psychology (01-09-2022)“…In a comparable truth baseline (CTB), a knowingly truthful baseline statement is compared to a statement of interest, and deviations in verbal details possibly…”
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15
The interaction of truthful and deceptive information
Published in Psychology, crime & law (20-04-2020)“…Research consistently shows that truthful accounts are richer in detail than deceptive accounts. It is unknown, however, how interviewees strategically…”
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16
A model statement does not enhance the verifiability approach
Published in Applied cognitive psychology (01-01-2020)“…Summary The present experiment investigated to what extent providing participants with a model statement influences the ability of the verifiability approach…”
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17
The ease of lying
Published in Consciousness and cognition (01-09-2011)“…Brain imaging studies suggest that truth telling constitutes the default of the human brain and that lying involves intentional suppression of the predominant…”
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18
Unraveling the roles of orienting and inhibition in the Concealed Information Test
Published in Psychophysiology (01-04-2017)“…The Concealed Information Test (CIT) is a well‐validated tool for physiological and behavioral detection of concealed knowledge. Two distinct theoretical…”
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19
Rapport‐building: Chat versus in‐person witness interviews
Published in Journal of investigative psychology and offender profiling (01-06-2023)“…Tactics recommended for rapport‐building consist of verbal (e.g., finding common ground or shared experiences) and non‐verbal (e.g., affirmations, displaying…”
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Stereotypical behavioural cues — but not their order — influence credibility judgements
Published in Journal of investigative psychology and offender profiling (01-06-2020)“…To what extent stereotypical deceptive behaviours such as gaze aversion and fidgeting actually influence people's credibility judgements remain largely…”
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