Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The first direct replication on using verbal cr...

Associated organisational units

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions. / Kleinberg, Bennett; Warmelink, Lara; Arntz, Arnoud et al.
In: Applied Cognitive Psychology, Vol. 32, No. 5, 09.2018, p. 592-599.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kleinberg, B, Warmelink, L, Arntz, A & Verschuere, B 2018, 'The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions', Applied Cognitive Psychology, vol. 32, no. 5, pp. 592-599. https://doi.org/10.1002/acp.3439

APA

Vancouver

Kleinberg B, Warmelink L, Arntz A, Verschuere B. The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions. Applied Cognitive Psychology. 2018 Sept;32(5):592-599. Epub 2018 Jul 16. doi: 10.1002/acp.3439

Author

Kleinberg, Bennett ; Warmelink, Lara ; Arntz, Arnoud et al. / The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions. In: Applied Cognitive Psychology. 2018 ; Vol. 32, No. 5. pp. 592-599.

Bibtex

@article{97562dc9128e48dfae0b5a7f8b931211,
title = "The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions",
abstract = "Verbal deception detection has gained momentum as a technique to tell truth-tellers from liars. At the same time, researchers' degrees of freedom make it hard to assess the robustness of effects. Replication research can help evaluate how reproducible an effect is. We present the first replication in verbal deception research whereby ferry passengers were instructed to tell the truth or lie about their travel plans. The original study found truth-tellers to include more specific time references in their answers. The replication study that closely mimicked the setting, procedure, materials, coding, and analyses found no lie-truth difference for specific time references. Although the power of our replication study was suboptimal (0.77), Bayesian statistics showed evidence in favor of the null hypothesis. Given the great applied consequences of verbal credibility tests, we hope this first replication attempt ignites much needed preregistered, high-powered, multilab replication efforts.",
keywords = "Deception detection, Intentions, Replication, Verbal credibility assessment",
author = "Bennett Kleinberg and Lara Warmelink and Arnoud Arntz and Bruno Verschuere",
note = "Kleinberg B, Warmelink L, Arntz A, Verschuere B. The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions. Appl Cognit Psychol. 2018;32:592–599. https://doi.org/10.1002/acp.3439",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1002/acp.3439",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "592--599",
journal = "Applied Cognitive Psychology",
issn = "0888-4080",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions

AU - Kleinberg, Bennett

AU - Warmelink, Lara

AU - Arntz, Arnoud

AU - Verschuere, Bruno

N1 - Kleinberg B, Warmelink L, Arntz A, Verschuere B. The first direct replication on using verbal credibility assessment for the detection of deceptive intentions. Appl Cognit Psychol. 2018;32:592–599. https://doi.org/10.1002/acp.3439

PY - 2018/9

Y1 - 2018/9

N2 - Verbal deception detection has gained momentum as a technique to tell truth-tellers from liars. At the same time, researchers' degrees of freedom make it hard to assess the robustness of effects. Replication research can help evaluate how reproducible an effect is. We present the first replication in verbal deception research whereby ferry passengers were instructed to tell the truth or lie about their travel plans. The original study found truth-tellers to include more specific time references in their answers. The replication study that closely mimicked the setting, procedure, materials, coding, and analyses found no lie-truth difference for specific time references. Although the power of our replication study was suboptimal (0.77), Bayesian statistics showed evidence in favor of the null hypothesis. Given the great applied consequences of verbal credibility tests, we hope this first replication attempt ignites much needed preregistered, high-powered, multilab replication efforts.

AB - Verbal deception detection has gained momentum as a technique to tell truth-tellers from liars. At the same time, researchers' degrees of freedom make it hard to assess the robustness of effects. Replication research can help evaluate how reproducible an effect is. We present the first replication in verbal deception research whereby ferry passengers were instructed to tell the truth or lie about their travel plans. The original study found truth-tellers to include more specific time references in their answers. The replication study that closely mimicked the setting, procedure, materials, coding, and analyses found no lie-truth difference for specific time references. Although the power of our replication study was suboptimal (0.77), Bayesian statistics showed evidence in favor of the null hypothesis. Given the great applied consequences of verbal credibility tests, we hope this first replication attempt ignites much needed preregistered, high-powered, multilab replication efforts.

KW - Deception detection

KW - Intentions

KW - Replication

KW - Verbal credibility assessment

U2 - 10.1002/acp.3439

DO - 10.1002/acp.3439

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85050452728

VL - 32

SP - 592

EP - 599

JO - Applied Cognitive Psychology

JF - Applied Cognitive Psychology

SN - 0888-4080

IS - 5

ER -