Sorry for the cut and paste, but here you go:
One way to test for lying, is to measure a persons desire to avoid a subject, which will sometimes indicate dishonesty or guilt. If you think the person is lying, change the subject quickly. A lying person will often go along easily, and may even visibly relax. An innocent person is more likely to be slightly confused by the change and want to finish their thoughts.
Another lie detecting technique is to suggest something that would make a guilty person feel uncomfortable and watch for a response. Suppose your wife Jane says she was at her mother's house, and you think she is lying. Rather than saying, "I'm calling your mother to verify this," you could use a subtle approach. You might say, "That reminds me, I'm going to stop by your mother's house today to fix that door for her."
If your wife was lying, the idea of you seeing her mother should make her nervous. She may give you reasons why you shouldn't go there. Of course, if your relationship has reached the point where you feel the necessity to resort to these techniques, a simple lie may not be the worst of your problems. Still, sometimes you need to know, so here are a few more ways to tell if someone is lying.
They are using your words. Using your exact words to respond can be an indication of lying. You say, for example, "Did you leave this here?" and they respond, "No, I did not leave this here."
They use un-contracted words. A lack of contractions is more common when lying. For example, instead of saying "I didn't sleep with her," a man might say," I did not have sexual relations with that woman." Again, compare to base behavior, though, as some people may not use contractions often anyhow.
Over-compensation. Often when people lie, they try too hard to be natural, and they give more detail than is necessary.
Forced smiles. A real smile involves more muscles, while a forced smile will use just the muscles around the mouth. The lie here may only be about their feelings, of course.
Let them talk. The more a person talks, the more likely you are to catch them in a lie (if they are being dishonest), especially when you learn the indications to watch for. These are just a few of the ways how to tell if someone is lying.
2006-08-16 14:29:06
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answer #1
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answered by ? 5
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Actually, there are at least 15 Signs of Deception:
Body Language of Lies:
• Physical expression will be limited and stiff, with few arm and hand movements. Hand, arm and leg movement
are toward their own body the liar takes up less space.
• A person who is lying to you will avoid making eye contact.
• Hands touching their face, throat & mouth. Touching or scratching the nose or behind their ear.
Not likely to touch his chest/heart with an open hand.
Emotional Gestures & Contradiction
• Timing and duration of emotional gestures and emotions are off a normal pace. The display of emotion is delayed, stays longer it would naturally, then stops suddenly.
• Timing is off between emotions gestures/expressions and words. Example: Someone says "I love it!"
when receiving a gift, and then smile after making that statement, rather then at the same time the statement
is made.
• Gestures/expressions don’t match the verbal statement, such as frowning when saying “I love you.”
• Expressions are limited to mouth movements when someone is faking emotions (like happy, surprised, sad, awe, )instead of the whole face. For example; when someone smiles naturally their whole face is involved: jaw/cheek movement, eyes and forehead push down, etc.
Interactions and Reactions
• A guilty person gets defensive. An innocent person will often go on the offensive.
• A liar is uncomfortable facing his questioner/accuser and may turn his head or body away.
• A liar might unconsciously place objects (book, coffee cup, etc.) between themselves and you.
Verbal Context and Content
• A liar will use your words to make answer a question. When asked, “Did you eat the last cookie?” The liar
answers, “No, I did not eat the last cookie.”
•A statement with a contraction is more likely to be truthful: “ I didn't do it” instead of “I did not do it”
• Liars sometimes avoid "lying" by not making direct statements. They imply answers instead of denying
something directly.
• The guilty person may speak more than natural, adding unnecessary details to convince you... they are not comfortable with silence or pauses in the conversation.
• A liar may leave out pronouns and speak in a monotonous tone. When a truthful statement is made the
pronoun is emphasized as much or more than the rest of the words in a statement.
• Words may be garbled and spoken softly, and syntax and grammar may be off. In other
words, his sentences will likely be muddled rather than emphasized.
Other signs of a lie:
• If you believe someone is lying, then change subject of a conversation quickly, a liar follows along willingly and becomes more relaxed. The guilty wants the subject changed; an innocent person may be confused by the sudden change in topics and will want to back to the previous subject.
• Using humor or sarcasm to avoid a subject.
Final Notes:
2006-08-16 15:31:57
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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According to needlenose.com, it's "unexplained smirks, inadvertent shrugs, shifty eyes and inappropriate smiles. Verbal signals include hesitations in speech or odd phrases, slips of the tongue or quickened speech."
But, if you know anyone who is adhd, those are also tale tell signs of adhd. Still, I have a son who is ADHD and acts like that unless he is lying where it is the only time he can actually look you straight in the eye and calmly sit. So, I don't think any of that is scientific.
2006-08-16 14:31:51
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Acts isn't a good account of Paul's existence. It grow to be written by technique of the same individual who wrote Luke, and by no skill by technique of Paul himself. Paul himself is truly extremely consistent, inspite of if a tad confusing. yet Paul did not write each and each of the works attributed to him. for this reason, in case you spot some inconsistency, it would want to correctly be that you're studying something by technique of someone except Paul, and that could want to account for the discrepancy. I used to imagine Paul grow to be a deceitful liar. yet I actually have come to work out i grow to be incorrect. in case you study it heavily, with expertise of the problem and what Paul wrote and what he did not, you'll see Paul isn't the form of undesirable guy in spite of everything.
2016-11-25 21:42:35
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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they won't look you in the eye, they look up to the left or right, they roll their eyes etc. when you ask a person a question look at their mouth, if they are lying there is a slight up turn to the edges, no kidding its like a smirk...sometimes people even outright smile when they are lying and you look at their mouth. they can't help it.
2006-08-16 14:28:28
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I know a couple.
Touching their nose - it often tingles when you are lying.
When they are not looking at you directly in the eye (looking down or away.) A reliable, but not 100%, indicator.
Their eyes are looking up and to their left (your right) - sign of a 'creative' answer being formulated from the right side of their brain. (If they are looking up to their right / your left, they are using the left - analytical side.)
Check with the US Secret Service - they are supposedly the best interpreters of facial gestures.
2006-08-16 14:32:46
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answer #6
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answered by Tom-SJ 6
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Avoidance of eye-contact and reduction in the volume of voice.
2006-08-16 14:56:58
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answer #7
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answered by Saffren 7
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I can see it in peoples eyes especially my ex wife's, her eyes looked like someone elses when she was liying, they just weren't hers.
2006-08-16 14:28:36
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answer #8
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answered by Iron Rider 6
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when they are talking to you and not looking you in the eye.
2006-08-20 13:00:08
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answer #9
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answered by just_plain_homely73701 2
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when they look at you nervous or look up and down
2006-08-16 14:28:39
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answer #10
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answered by tcm. :) 4
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