Why do lie-catchers fail? A lens model meta-analysis of human lie judgments.
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Abstract
Decades of research has shown that people are poor at detecting lies. Two explanations for this finding have been proposed. First, it has been suggested that lie detection is inaccurate because people rely on invalid cues when judging deception. Second, it has been suggested that lack of valid cues to deception limits accuracy. A series of 4 meta-analyses tested these hypotheses with the framework of Brunswik's (1952) lens model. Meta-Analysis 1 investigated perceived cues to deception by correlating 66 behavioral cues in 153 samples with deception judgments. People strongly associate deception with impressions of incompetence (r = .59) and ambivalence (r = .49). Contrary to self-reports, eye contact is only…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 79
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Deception
- Lie detection
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Cognitive psychology