Lying and lie spotting: Can brain waves detect lying and whether the use of EEG for theta band analysis is proficient in catching liars?
By: Kuruganty, Harshawardhan
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BookPublisher: The Indian Police Journal Description: 67(4), Oct-Dec, 2020: p.137-145.Subject(s): Deception, Personality, Lie spotting, Brain signaling, Electroencephalography| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 67(4), Oct-Dec, 2020: p.137-145 | Available | AR125310 |
Some people can lie confidently and never get caught, but a few are gifted with abilities to catch such people. The exciting question, asking how people are even capable of doing such things is explored in this research. In experiment-1 of the study, 40 students participated in an experiment where their skills to lie and catch liars was explored; an effort was made to relate them to their personalities. In experiment-2, 10 students were asked to lie while they were equipped with an EEG apparatus. Results confirmed that it is not necessary for a liar to be a lie spotter in all the cases and that the presence of a video teaching how to catch a liar could not affect the natural abilities of a person. An idea of relating a human’s short term memory to the theta brain waves was highlighted and then the results were compared to verify the presence of the same particular band while lying. – Reproduced


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