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Chapter 4 Deception Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-1 Learning Objectives • Describe the two types of polygraph tests • Describe the most common errors made by the Comparison Question Test (CQT) and Concealed Information Test (CIT) • Describe physiologically based alternatives to the polygraph • Outline the verbal and non-verbal cues of deception Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-2 Learning Objectives • Define malingering, and list the three explanatory models of malingering • Differentiate between the types of studies used to examine malingering Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-3 Polygraph Method • Based on the belief that deception is related to physiological change • Measures: – Respiration – Heart rate – Sweating Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-4 Uses of Polygraph • Helps in criminal investigations (suspect is asked to take a polygraph test) • Verify a crime has occurred (victim is asked to take a polygraph test) • Monitoring sexual offenders on probation (United States) • Pre-employment screening for security agencies and police Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-5 Types of Polygraph Tests • There are two main types of polygraph tests: – Comparison Question Test (CQT) – Concealed Information Test (CIT) Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-6 Comparison Question Test • Includes three types of questions: – Irrelevant – Relevant – Comparison • Deception is assessed by comparing physiological responses between relevant and comparison questions Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-7 Comparison Question Test: Sample Questions Question Irrelevant Relevant Purpose Used to obtain a baseline. Deal with the crime. Comparison Deal with prior antisocial behaviour. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. Example Are you left handed? Did you assault Sam Smith on March 11th? Before age 25, did you ever verbally threaten to hurt anyone? 4-8 Phases of the CQT • Pre-test interview: Interview with suspect to develop the comparison questions • Polygraph exam: Questions are asked while suspect’s physiological responses are measured • Scoring: Polygraph examiner scores the physiological responses to determine if the suspect is truthful, deceptive, or inconclusive • Post-test interview: If a suspect is judged deceptive they are pressured to confess Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4-9 Control Question Test: Assumptions • Assumes guilty people react more to relevant questions and innocent people react more to comparison questions • Suspect falsely accused of a crime might react more strongly to questions about the crime than to vague questions concerning past behaviour Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 10 Concealed Information Test • Assesses if suspect has information that only the criminal would know • Asks suspects multiple-choice questions, one option is correct • Assumes if the suspect is guilty they will react strongly to correct information • Rarely used in Canada or United States Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 11 Types of Polygraph Studies • Laboratory studies – Ground truth is known – Limited application to real-life situations • Field studies – Real-life situations and actual suspects – Ground truth is not known Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 12 Accuracy of the CQT • Majority of guilty suspects correctly identified – 84% to 92% guilty correctly identified • Relatively large number of innocent suspects falsely identified as guilty – 9% to 24% false positive errors • Accuracy of original examiners higher than blind scorers Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 13 Accuracy of CIT • No field studies have been conducted in North America • Very accurate at identifying innocent participants – Around 95% correctly identified • Less accurate at identifying guilty participants – Around 85% correctly identified Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 14 Countermeasures • Both physical and mental countermeasures dramatically reduce the effectiveness of the CQT (Honts et al., 1994) • The CIT does not appear to be effected by anti-anxiety drugs (Iacono et al., 1992) Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 15 Admissibility of Polygraph • Did not pass general acceptance test when first admitted as evidence in court (Frye v. United States, 1923) • Currently allowed in some States if agreed by both prosecution and defence • Not admissible into evidence in Canadian courts (R. v. Beland, 1987) Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 16 Other Measures • Thermal imaging: – Detects facial warming due to blood flow • Event-related brain potentials (ERP) – Electrodes measure brain activity in response to a significant stimulus – P300 used to detect guilty knowledge Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 17 Other Measures: fMRI • Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) – Measures differences in brain activity when people are being honest versus deceptive – Different parts of the brain are activated when person is deceptive versus when they are telling the truth Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 18 Detecting Deception: Verbal Cues • Verbal cues most consistently related to deception include: – Higher voice pitch – Increased speech disturbance (ah, umm) – Slower speech • Pattern of verbal cues may depend on how cognitively complex the lie is Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 19 Verbal Characteristics of Deception (Table 4.3) • Speech fillers – Frequency of saying “ah” or “umm” • Speech errors – Repetition, change, slips of tongue • Pitch of voice • Rate of speech • Speech pauses Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 20 Non-verbal Characteristics of Deception (Table 4.3) • • • • • • Gaze aversion Smiling Blinking Fidgeting Illustrators Hand or finger movements Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. • Leg or foot movements • Body movements • Shrugs • Head movements • Shifting positions 4 - 21 Detecting Deception: Verbal Cues • Verbal cues that are indicative of honesty: – Make corrections in account – Admit to lack of memory • Verbal cues that are indicative of deception: – Little detail – Less compelling accounts – More nervous and tense Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 22 Detecting Deception: Professionals • Vrij (2000) reported accuracy rates: – Truths = 67% – Lies = 44% • Accuracy of professional lie catchers vary: – Have a truthfulness bias – Tend to rely on wrong cues Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 23 Factitious Disorder • Intentionally produced physical or psychological symptoms • Internal motivation to assume the sick role • Absence of external incentives Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 24 Somatoform Disorder • Physical symptoms that cannot be explained by organic impairment • Symptoms are not intentionally produced • Often co-occurs with depression or anxiety Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 25 Malingering • Psychological or physical symptoms are voluntary • There are external motivations for the production of symptoms – Malinger mental illness to avoid criminal punishment, to obtain drugs, or for compensation such as disability – Prevalence quite high in forensic settings Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 26 Defensiveness • Defensiveness refers to the conscious denial or minimization of physical or psychological symptoms – Might wish to appear high functioning to be seen as a fit parent – Some patients may not want to admit they certain symptoms Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 27 Explanations of Malingering • Three explanatory models of malingering (Rogers, 1990): – Pathogenic model – Criminological model – Adaptational model Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 28 Pathogenic Model • Assumes malingering results from an underlying mental disorder • The patient attempts to gain control over his or her pathology by creating fictitious symptoms • Little empirical support Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 29 Criminological Model • Malingering due to: – Antisocial personality disorder (APD) – Forensic assessment – Lack of cooperation – Discrepancy between findings • Research does not support an association between APD or cooperation and malingering Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 30 Adaptational Model • Asserts malingering is likely to occur when: – A perceived adversarial context is present – Personal stakes are very high – No other viable alternatives are perceived • Research findings support this model Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 31 Research Assessing Malingering • Three basic designs: – Case study – Simulation – Known groups Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 32 Case Studies • Useful for generating a wide variety of hypotheses • Only way to study rare syndromes Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 33 Simulation Design • Most frequently used • Participants are told to malinger a specific disorder and compared to – Control group – Clinical comparison group • High experimental rigour • Limited generalizability to the real world Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 34 Known-Groups Design • Involves two stages: – Establishing the criterion groups (e.g. genuine patients and malingers) – Analysis of the similarities and differences between criterion groups • Good generalizability to real-world settings • Problems classifying criterion groups Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 35 Detecting Malingered Psychosis • Clues regarding the symptoms: – Report rare, atypical symptoms, or absurd symptoms – Report atypical delusions or hallucinations – Absence of subtle symptoms – Continuous hallucinations rather than intermittent (continued) Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 36 Detecting Malingered Psychosis (continued) • Other clues: – Accuse clinician of not believing them – Presence of accomplice – Crime fits pattern of criminal history Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 37 Assessments: SIRS • The Structured Interview of Reported Symptoms (SIRS; Rogers et al., 1992) – Uses a structured interview – 172 items organized into 8 scales – Research indicates good validity Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 38 Assessments: M-FAST • The M-FAST test (Miller, 2000) – Interview-based method – 25 items organized into 9 scales – Useful and reliable screening test for malingering Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 39 Assessments: MMPI/MMPI-2 • MMPI/MMPI-2 are self-report personality inventories – They contain scales such as the infrequency (F) scale and the Back F (FB) scale selected to detect unusual or atypical symptoms – Research indicates these scales are the most useful at detecting malingerers (Rogers et al., 2003) Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. 4 - 40