Department of Psychology, Portland State University, Portland, USA
Research Article
Catching Liars in Psychological Evaluations of Criminal
Defendants: Comparing Direct vs. Indirect Assessment of
Truthfulness
Author(s): Shawn Adair Johnston*, Gabriel Johnston, Alexis Candelier and Dana Powers-Green
This research examines the two-fold question of why people are so poor at detecting deception and why the indirect assessment of veracity may be more
accurate than direct assessment. Four statements made by criminal defendants, two true and two deceptive, were rated by participants on a nine item test of
veracity. Eight of the items were derived from Criterion-Based Content Analysis and Reality Monitoring, two techniques of verbal content analysis that exhibit good reliability. Scores on these eight items represented the indirect measure of truthfulness while a ninth item, the direct measure, asked participants to rate the overall truthfulness of each statement. Results indicated that the indirect assessment of truthfulness accurately classified a higher percentage of the statements
made by the criminal defendants than the direct assessment while also accounting for more of t.. Read More»
Journal of Forensic Research received 1817 citations as per Google Scholar report