Are criminals better lie detectors? Investigating offenders' abilities in the context of deception detection
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In: Applied cognitive psychology Volume 35 / Issue 1 (2020-10-24) , S. 203-214; EISSN 1099-0720
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The present research examined lie detection abilities of a rarely investigated group, namely offenders. Results of the studies conducted thus far indicated a better performance of offenders compared to non‐offenders when discriminating between true and false messages. With two new studies, we aimed at replicating offenders' superior abilities in the context of deception detection. Results of Study 1 (N = 76 males), in contrast, revealed that offenders were significantly worse at accurately classifying true and false messages compared to non‐offenders (students). Results of Study 2 (N = 175 males) revealed that offenders' discrimination performance was not significantly different compared to non‐offenders (clinic staff). An internal meta‐analysis yielded no significant difference between offenders and non‐offenders, questioning the generalizability of previous findings.
@article{doi:10.17170/kobra-202101213013, author ={Schindler, Simon and Wagner, Laura K. and Reinhard, Marc-André and Ruhara, Nico and Pfattheicher, Stefan and Nitschke, Joachim}, title ={Are criminals better lie detectors? Investigating offenders' abilities in the context of deception detection}, keywords ={150 and Vorstellung and Täuschung and Erkennung and Dunkle Triade and Täter and Lügendetektor}, copyright ={http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/}, language ={en}, journal ={Applied cognitive psychology}, year ={2020-10-24} }