Authors
Henri Bouma, Gertjan Burghouts, Richard den Hollander, Sophie Van Der Zee, Jan Baan, Johan-Martijn ten Hove, Sjaak van Diepen, Paul van den Haak, Jeroen van Rest
Publication date
2016/10/24
Conference
Optics and Photonics for Counterterrorism, Crime Fighting, and Defence XII
Volume
9995
Pages
183-202
Publisher
SPIE
Description
Deception detection is valuable in the security domain to distinguish truth from lies. It is desirable in many security applications, such as suspect and witness interviews and airport passenger screening. Interviewers are constantly trying to assess the credibility of a statement, usually based on intuition without objective technical support. However, psychological research has shown that humans can hardly perform better than random guessing. Deception detection is a multi-disciplinary research area with an interest from different fields, such as psychology and computer science. In the last decade, several developments have helped to improve the accuracy of lie detection (e.g., with a concealed information test, increasing the cognitive load, or measurements with motion capture suits) and relevant cues have been discovered (e.g., eye blinking or fiddling with the fingers). With an increasing presence of mobile phones …
Total citations
20182019202020211314
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