A cognitive approach to lie detection: A meta‐analysis

A Vrij, RP Fisher, H Blank - Legal and Criminological …, 2017 - Wiley Online Library
Introduction This article provides a meta‐analysis of a new, cognitive approach to (non‐)
verbal lie detection. This cognitive lie detection approach consists of three techniques:(1) …

Eliciting information and detecting lies in intelligence interviewing: An overview of recent research

A Vrij, PA Granhag - Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
Traditional police–suspect interviews differ from intelligence interviews in several important
ways, and these differences merit new research activities. This article presents an overview …

Police officers' perceptions of statement inconsistency

H Deeb, A Vrij, L Hope, S Mann… - Criminal Justice …, 2018 - journals.sagepub.com
We examined police officers'(N= 71) perceptions of statement inconsistency types (within-
statement, between-statement, statement-evidence, and within-group inconsistencies) …

Statements about true and false intentions: Using the Cognitive Interview to magnify the differences

T Sooniste, PA Granhag… - … Journal of Psychology, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
This study investigates the combined effect of the Cognitive Interview (CI) and the
unanticipated questions approach on the magnitude of the elicited cues to true and false …

Detecting deception within small groups: A literature review

Z Vernham, PA Granhag, E Mac Giolla - Frontiers in psychology, 2016 - frontiersin.org
Investigators often have multiple suspects to interview in order to determine whether they
are guilty or innocent of a crime. Nevertheless, co-offending has been significantly neglected …

Discriminating between true and false intent among small cells of suspects

T Sooniste, PA Granhag… - Legal and …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Purpose Despite high potential value for real‐life situations, detecting true and false
intentions by groups of suspects have not been previously investigated. Method The …

A reverse order interview does not aid deception detection regarding intentions

E Fenn, M McGuire, S Langben… - Frontiers in …, 2015 - frontiersin.org
Promising recent research suggests that more cognitively demanding interviews improve
deception detection accuracy. Would these cognitively demanding techniques work in the …

Learning to detect deception from evasive answers and inconsistencies across repeated interviews: A study with lay respondents and police officers

J Masip, C Martínez, I Blandón-Gitlin… - Frontiers in …, 2018 - frontiersin.org
Previous research has shown that inconsistencies across repeated interviews do not
indicate deception because liars deliberately tend to repeat the same story. However, when …

Eliciting information from small cells of sources

PA Granhag, S Oleszkiewicz… - Journal of Policing …, 2016 - Taylor & Francis
In past research, the Scharff technique has consistently outperformed different comparison
techniques with respect to the elicitation of human intelligence. This study extends previous …

Unanticipated questions can yield unanticipated outcomes in investigative interviews

T Parkhouse, TC Ormerod - PloS one, 2018 - journals.plos.org
Asking unanticipated questions in investigative interviews can elicit differences in the verbal
behaviour of truth-tellers and liars: When faced with unanticipated questions, liars give less …