detecting deception - a leadership primer
DESCRIPTION
This is a brief overview of some aspects known, or practiced with regard to detecting deception in others. The methods described herein should not be applied indiscriminately, but should be considered 'thinking points' for today's leaders.TRANSCRIPT
DetectingDeception
A Tool of the Tradefor today’s Leader
The purpose of this short presentation is to bring to the attention of leaders, some of the methods worth considering with regard to detecting deception in others.
Purpose Statement
Under normal circumstances, it has been suggested that most people are not intentionally deceptive. However, as risk of any sort increases, whether personal, professional, or philosophical, the degree of deception in others can increase.
General Assessment
DETECTING DECEPTION
Use with extre
me caution!
Avinoam SapirDr. Paul EkmanJoe NavarroJohn E. Reid Pamela MeyerStan WaltersSusan Adams
One of the most coveted abilities of today’s professional leader is…
Mechanical Non-Mechanical
Detecting deception falls into two general categories
The reason it’s considered an ability and not a talent is because…
It’s teachable, It’s practical, It’s used everyday, and Virtually anyone can become proficient
Mechanical Means for Detecting Deception…
may have started with the pull of a donkey’s tail…
500 B.C. in India. A priest put lampblack on the tail of a donkey in a dark room and all suspects were to pull the magic donkey’s tail.
They were told that when the one who was the thief pulled the magic donkey’s tail, he would speak and be heard throughout the temple.
The person who did not pull the tail had clean hands and was pronounced the thief and punished.
Pros and Cons
Mechanical
Pros – scientifically measurable; measured level of reliability; individualized; accepted by the science community; used in many criminal justice disciplines
Cons – expensive; complex; significant barrier to entry/use; not generally mobile
Non-Mechanical
Pros – inexpensive; less complex; low to no barrier to entry/use; highly mobile; used in every criminal justice discipline
Cons – not generally accepted by the science community; not scientifically measurable; generalized
Pros and Cons
Mechanical Means for Detecting Deception Cont’
Hydrosphygmograph Polygraph
Computerized Voice Stress Analyzer
Field Interrogation Support Tool: The F.I.S.T.®
Mechanical Means for Detecting Deception Cont’
Thermal
EEG
Non-Mechanical Means for Detecting Deception
Non-ValidatedMethods
Sanpaku
Eye Accessing Cues
Body LanguageProxemics
Micro-facial Expressions
Graphology
Statement Analysis
Non-Mechanical Means for Detecting Deception cont’
Written Word
Spoken Word
STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Why Statement Analysis?
Number of Words in the English Language: 1,025,109.8
A new word is created every 98 minutes or about 14.7 words per day.
“Measurement is the first step that leads to control.If you can’t measure something, you can’t understand it. If you can’t understand it, you can’t control it. If you can’t control it, you can’t improve it.” H. James Harrington
General Rule of Thumb:
Statement Analysis cont’
#1 When seeking the truth, never rely on any single point as a decider. Always look for clusters of behaviors as indicators only.
#2 Look for about 33% division in a statement; beginning, middle, end.
#3 Identify pronoun and tense consistency; changes in terms indicate changes in reality.
#4 If the subject didn’t say it, then it didn’t happen – don’t fill in the blanks for them.
Whether written or spoken, the truth will reveal itself to the attentive listener.
In the field of observation, chance favors the prepared mind. Dr. Louis Pasteur
When you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains must be the truth. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ~
Sherlock Holmes