Detecting deception in a bluffing body: The role of expertise |
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Authors: | Natalie Sebanz Maggie Shiffrar |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Social Sciences, Winston-Salem State University, 115 Coltrane Hall, 601 W. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Winston-Salem, NC 27110, USA;(2) Department of Psychology, Winston-Salem State University, 115 Coltrane Hall, 601 Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive, Winston-Salem, NC 27110, USA |
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Abstract: | Studies of deception detection traditionally have focused on verbal communication. Nevertheless, people commonly deceive others through nonverbal cues. Previous research has shown that intentions can be inferred from the ways in which people move their bodies. Furthermore, motor expertise within a given domain has been shown to increase visual sensitivity to other people’s movements within that domain. Does expertise also enhance deception detection from bodily movement? In two psychophysical studies, experienced basketball players and novices attempted to distinguish deceptive intentions (fake passes) and veridical intentions (true passes) from an observed individual’s actions. Whereas experts and novices performed similarly with postural cues, only experts could detect deception from kinematics alone. These results demonstrate a link between action expertise and the detection of nonverbal deception. |
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