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Facial and vocal cues of deception and honesty
Authors:Miron Zuckerman  Richard S. DeFrank  Judith A. Hall  Deborah T. Larrance  Robert Rosenthal
Affiliation:University of Rochester USA;The Johns Hopkins University USA;University of Rochester USA;Harvard University USA
Abstract:Facial expressions and vocal cues (filtered speech) of honest and deceptive messages were examined in posed and spontaneous situations. The question of interest was the degree to which nonverbal cues transmit information about deception. Results indicated that (a) for both the facial and vocal channels, posing (as compared to spontaneous behavior) produced a higher level of communication accuracy; (b) facial expressions of deceptive (as compared to honest) messages were rated as less pleasant, while vocal expressions of deception were rated as less honest, less assertive, and less dominant, particularly in the posed condition; (c) the sender's ability to convey honesty was negatively correlated with his/her ability to convey deception, suggesting the existence of a demeanor bias—individual senders tend to appear and sound consistently honest (or dishonest) regardless of whether they deliver an honest or a deceptive message; (d) in the posing condition, the sender's abilities to convey honesty/deception via facial and vocal cues were positively and significantly correlated, whereas in the spontaneous condition they were not; and (e) senders whose full (unfiltered) speech indicated more involvement with their responses were judged as more honest from both their vocal (filtered speech) and facial cues, in both the honest and deceptive conditions.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Miron Zuckerman   Department of Psychology   University of Rochester   Rochester   NY 14627.
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