How to spot the secretive activities of rogue fishing boats - BBC Future
For years it’s been impossible to see illegal acts happening at sea, from overfishing to human rights abuses. Now that’s changing, says Jacqueline Savitz.
How eavesdropping on elephants is keeping them safe - BBC Future
Conserving endangered wildlife is an expensive, time consuming job, but new technology may make protecting animals, and catching the poachers who threaten them, easier.
The ‘miracle mineral’ the world needs - BBC Future
You can’t grow crops without phosphorus. To get it, farmers often rely on expensive, frequently unavailable fertiliser. But there could be a better – and easier – way.
Sketching while narrating as a tool to detect deceit - Vrij - 2020 - Applied Cognitive Psychology - Wiley Online Library
In none of the deception studies that used drawings to date, was the effect of sketching on both speech content and drawing content examined, making it unclear what the full potential is of the use o...
Strategic Use of Evidence During Police Interviews: When Training to Detect Deception Works | SpringerLink
Law and Human Behavior - Research on deception detection in legal contexts has neglected the question of how the use of evidence can affect deception detection accuracy. In this study, police...
Accuracy of Deception Judgments - Charles F. Bond, Bella M. DePaulo, 2006
We analyze the accuracy of deception judgments, synthesizing research results from 206 documents and 24,483 judges. In relevant studies, people attempt to discr...
Lie Detection from Multiple Cues: A Meta‐analysis - Hartwig - 2014 - Applied Cognitive Psychology - Wiley Online Library
Despite the importance of judgments of veracity in many settings, research suggests that it is difficult to detect lies. In this meta-analysis, we assess the detectability of lies from constellations...
Detecting smugglers: Identifying strategies and behaviours in individuals in possession of illicit objects - Mann - 2020 - Applied Cognitive Psychology - Wiley Online Library
Behaviour detection officers' task is to spot potential criminals in public spaces, but scientific research concerning what to look for is scarce. In two experiments, 52 (Experiment 1A) and 60 (Exper...
Lessons From Pinocchio: Cues to Deception May Be Highly Exaggerated - Timothy J. Luke, 2019
Deception researchers widely acknowledge that cues to deception—observable behaviors that may differ between truthful and deceptive messages—tend to be weak. Ne...
Accuracy of Deception Judgments - Charles F. Bond, Bella M. DePaulo, 2006
We analyze the accuracy of deception judgments, synthesizing research results from 206 documents and 24,483 judges. In relevant studies, people attempt to discr...
Malingering and factitious disorder | Practical Neurology
Although exaggeration or amplification of symptoms is common in all illness, deliberate deception is rare. In settings associated with litigation/disability evaluation, the rate of malingering may be as high as 30%, but its frequency in clinical practice is not known. We describe the main characteristics of deliberate deception (factitious disorders and malingering) and ways that neurologists might detect symptom exaggeration. The key to establishing that the extent or severity of reported symptoms does not truly represent their severity is to elicit inconsistencies in different domains, but it is not possible to determine whether the reports are intentionally inaccurate. Neurological disorders where difficulty in determining the degree of willed exaggeration is most likely include functional weakness and movement disorders, post-concussional syndrome (or mild traumatic brain injury), psychogenic non-epileptic attacks and complex regional pain syndrome type 1 (especially when there is an associated functional movement disorder). Symptom amplification or even fabrication are more likely if the patient might gain benefit of some sort, not necessarily financial. Techniques to detect deception in medicolegal settings include covert surveillance and review of social media accounts. We also briefly describe specialised psychological tests designed to elicit effort from the patient.
Prospects of functional magnetic resonance imaging as lie detector
Following the demise of the polygraph, supporters of assisted scientific lie detection tools have enthusiastically appropriated neuroimaging technologies “as the savior of scientifically verifiable lie detection in the courtroom” (Gerard, ...
Detecting coached feigning using the Test of Memory Malingering (TOMM) and the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology (SIMS) - PubMed
Undergraduate students were administered the Test of Memory Malingering (TOMM) and the Structured Inventory of the Malingered Symptomatology (SIMS) and asked to respond honestly, or instructed to feign cognitive dysfunction due to head injury. Before both instruments were administered, symptom-coach …
Frontiers | The Detection of Malingering: A New Tool to Identify Made-Up Depression | Psychiatry
Major depression is a high-prevalence mental disease with major socio-economic impact, for both the direct and the indirect costs. Major depression symptoms can be faked or exaggerated in order to obtain economic compensation from insurance companies. Critically, depression is potentially easily malingered, as the symptoms that characterize this psychiatric disorder are not difficult to emulate. Although some tools to assess malingering of psychiatric conditions are already available, they are principally based on self-reporting and are thus easily faked. In this paper, we propose a new method to automatically detect the simulation of depression, which is based on the analysis of mouse movements while the patient is engaged in a double-choice computerized task, responding to simple and complex questions about depressive symptoms. This tool clearly has a key advantage over the other tools: the kinematic movement is not consciously controllable by the subjects, and thus it is almost impossible to deceive. Two groups of subjects were recruited for the study. The first one, which was used to train different machine-learning algorithms, comprises 60 subjects (20 depressed patients and 40 healthy volunteers); the second one, which was used to test the machine-learning models, comprises 27 subjects (9 depressed patients and 18 healthy volunteers). In both groups, the healthy volunteers were randomly assigned to the liars and truth-tellers group. Machine-learning models were train...
Practices in forensic neuropsychology: perspectives of neuropsychologists and trial attorneys - PubMed
Members of the National Academy of Neuropsychology and the Association of Trial Lawyers of America were surveyed concerning current practices in forensic neuropsychology. The majority of neuropsychologists and attorneys reported that attorneys never observe neuropsychological testing. Attorneys repo …
How do you treat someone who doesn’t accept they’re ill? - BBC Future
Some people suffering psychoactive disorders such as schizophrenia have no idea they are ill – and refuse to seek treatment. Is it right to force them to seek treatment?
The hunt for the fish pirates who exploit the sea - BBC Future
For 10 years, a rogue fishing vessel and its crew plundered the world’s oceans, escaping repeated attempts of capture. Then a dramatic pursuit finally netted the one that got away.
Dr. Marc Feldman | Munchausen Syndrome & Factitious Disorders Expert
A comprehensive site from an expert & author dealing with medical deception including Munchausen syndrome, Munchausen by proxy, factitious disorder, medical child abuse & malingering. In these conditions, people feign, exaggerate, or induce physical and/or psychological illness.
About Dr. Marc Feldman | Malingering Disorder & Factitious Disease Expert
Learn all about Dr. Feldman, an international expert in factitious disorder, Munchausen syndrome, Munchausen by proxy, and malingering. Take a look at his background, as well as his credits including his five published works.
Munchausen syndrome, also called factitious disorder imposed on self, is a psychiatric disorder in which a person assumes the role of a sick patient without the intention of external gain (time off from work, medications). Physical symptoms are intentionally produced with the purpose of gaining the appearance of a "sick patient." These patients are often a medical mystery to healthcare workers as their laboratory, and radiographic results can be inconsistent with the history and physical exam. Furthermore, standard therapeutic interventions may not be effective in persons with Munchausen syndrome, causing increased confusion for the care team.[1][2][3][4][5]
Do You Have Munchausen Syndrome? Causes & Treatment
Munchausen syndrome is a mental disorder condition in which a person intentionally fakes, simulates, worsens, or self-induces an injury or illness for the main purpose of being treated like a medical patient. Read about treatment, symptoms, and prognosis.