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      Is anyone there? Drawings as a tool to detect deceit in occupation interviews

      , , ,
      Psychology, Crime & Law
      Informa UK Limited

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          Comparing effect sizes in follow-up studies: ROC Area, Cohen's d, and r.

          In order to facilitate comparisons across follow-up studies that have used different measures of effect size, we provide a table of effect size equivalencies for the three most common measures: ROC area (AUC), Cohen's d, and r. We outline why AUC is the preferred measure of predictive or diagnostic accuracy in forensic psychology or psychiatry, and we urge researchers and practitioners to use numbers rather than verbal labels to characterize effect sizes.
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            Increasing cognitive load to facilitate lie detection: the benefit of recalling an event in reverse order.

            In two experiments, we tested the hypotheses that (a) the difference between liars and truth tellers will be greater when interviewees report their stories in reverse order than in chronological order, and (b) instructing interviewees to recall their stories in reverse order will facilitate detecting deception. In Experiment 1, 80 mock suspects told the truth or lied about a staged event and did or did not report their stories in reverse order. The reverse order interviews contained many more cues to deceit than the control interviews. In Experiment 2, 55 police officers watched a selection of the videotaped interviews of Experiment 1 and made veracity judgements. Requesting suspects to convey their stories in reverse order improved police observers' ability to detect deception and did not result in a response bias.
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              Criteria-Based Content Analysis: A Qualitative Review of the First 37 Studies.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychology, Crime & Law
                Psychology, Crime & Law
                Informa UK Limited
                1068-316X
                1477-2744
                May 2012
                May 2012
                : 18
                : 4
                : 377-388
                Article
                10.1080/1068316X.2010.498422
                cff9de38-e61d-417a-b408-c8aa2a117e64
                © 2012
                History

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