Title of article
Saccadic eye movement rate as a cue to deceit
Author/Authors
Vrij، نويسنده , , Aldert and Oliveira، نويسنده , , Joمo and Hammond، نويسنده , , Annie and Ehrlichman، نويسنده , , Howard، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
5
From page
15
To page
19
Abstract
In the present experiment we considered a cue that has not been examined in nonverbal deception research before, non-visual saccadic eye movement rate. The psychological process as to why saccadic eye movements could be related to deception is also new for nonverbal deception research: memory retrieval. Non-visual saccadic eye movement rate has been shown to be related to memory search, with searching information in long-term memory generating increased saccadic activity (Ehrlichman & Micic, 2012). According to fMRI research lying is associated with more long-term memory search than truth telling (Ganis et al., 2003), which leads to our hypothesis that liars display more saccadic eye movements than truth tellers. Thirty participants expressed a true opinion and lied about another opinion (within-subjects design) and the number of saccades per second of speech was measured. As predicted, participants displayed fewer saccades when they told the truth than when they told a spontaneous lie. The implications for this finding are discussed.
Keywords
saccadic eye movements , deception , Spontaneous and planned lies
Journal title
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
Record number
2232110
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