Journalartikel

TRAINING LIE-DETECTORS TO USE NONVERBAL CUES INSTEAD OF GLOBAL HEURISTICS


AutorenlisteFIEDLER, K; WALKA, I

Jahr der Veröffentlichung1993

Seiten199-223

ZeitschriftHuman Communication Research

Bandnummer20

Heftnummer2

ISSN0360-3989

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2958.1993.tb00321.x

VerlagOxford University Press


Abstract
Everyday lie detectors lack the necessary knowledge to use nonverbal cues that discriminate lies from truthful communications. Instead, they rely on general heuristics like infrequency of reported events or falsifiability. Lie detectors judged the veracity of 40 reports on minor delinquency that were either truthful or not and referred either to falsifiable manifest actions or to nonfalsifiable subjective feelings. In the uninformed condition, detectors were free to use their intuitive strategies. In the informed condition, they were given detailed instructions about valid nonverbal cues. In the informed feedback condition, they received additional outcome feedback. Performance teas generally above chance but further improved through cue information and feedback. Falsifiability caused a bias toward reduced veracity judgments. A lens model analysis supports the interpretation that naive lie detectors follow content-related heuristics but can flexibly change their strategy as they learn about authentic nonverbal cues.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilFIEDLER, K. and WALKA, I. (1993) TRAINING LIE-DETECTORS TO USE NONVERBAL CUES INSTEAD OF GLOBAL HEURISTICS, Human Communication Research, 20(2), pp. 199-223. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2958.1993.tb00321.x

APA-ZitierstilFIEDLER, K., & WALKA, I. (1993). TRAINING LIE-DETECTORS TO USE NONVERBAL CUES INSTEAD OF GLOBAL HEURISTICS. Human Communication Research. 20(2), 199-223. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2958.1993.tb00321.x



Schlagwörter


COMMUNICATIONDECEPTIONPROBABILITY

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