Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Mind vs body: What is a better lie detector?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Apr, 2014 01:05 PM
    To know if the person in front of you is lying, you may rely a lot on your instincts as more than the conscious mind, the body may act as a better lie detector, suggests a study.
     
    “Perhaps our own bodies know better than our conscious minds who is lying,” Leanne ten Brinke, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley, was quoted as saying.
     
    For the study, researchers conducted a classic lie detection experiment in a different way.
     
    The participants in the the experiment are shown videotape of people, some of whom lie and the participants correctly guess the liars about half the time.
     
    Building on that experiment, the researchers tried to measure the unconscious reactions of the participants once they watched the video and made their decisions.
     
    The participants were, therefore, again shown images of people already in the video only for milliseconds so that this time they could not make any conscious assessments.
     
    In the word task that followed, the participants were slower in placing words like honest or truthful into the “truth” category when the image of a liar was flashed, but they were faster in placing words like deceitful into the “lie” category.
     
    So, people seemed better at detecting lies unconsciously than consciously, concluded the researchers.
     
    With another experiment that involves measuring physiological symptoms like blood flow and perspiration in people who are listening to a liar, ten Brinke hopes to offer concrete tactics to help us identify liars, The New York Times reported.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Psychological Science.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study

    e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study
    The fast spreading e-cigarettes are undoing the anti-smoking efforts of the last three decades, health experts warn. Also, the number of people being poisoned by e-cigarettes in the US has gone up manifold in the last few years, according to official reports.

    e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study

    Tiny robot that performs surgery via belly button!

    Tiny robot that performs surgery via belly button!
    Imagine a tiny robot that can enter your body via small belly button precision, perform surgery and return to its base peacefully.

    Tiny robot that performs surgery via belly button!

    An app to test your eyes anywhere on earth

    An app to test your eyes anywhere on earth
    In a ground-breaking innovation that could help prevent blindness in millions across the world, scientists have developed an app that allows eye tests anywhere.

    An app to test your eyes anywhere on earth

    High temperature reduces length of pregnancy: Study

    High temperature reduces length of pregnancy: Study
    If you are pregnant and wish a full-term delivery, it is better to shift to a colder place before the mercury goes up as high temperature may reduce the length of your pregnancy, research indicates.

    High temperature reduces length of pregnancy: Study

    Astronauts' space odyssey alters their hearts for 'bad'

    Astronauts' space odyssey alters their hearts for 'bad'
    In an alarming revelation, a new study finds that astronauts' hearts become more spherical when exposed to long periods of microgravity in space -- a change that could lead to cardiac problems when they are back on earth.

    Astronauts' space odyssey alters their hearts for 'bad'

    Autism, an individual disorder

    Autism, an individual disorder
    The International Centre for Neurological Restoration (CIREN) here is developing a project aimed at validating and measuring the effectiveness of interventions in patients with autism spectrum disorders (ASD).

    Autism, an individual disorder