How to spot a liar
Show full transcript
Okay, now I don’t want to alarm anybody in this room,
but it’s just come to my attention that the person to your right is a liar.
(Laughter)
Also, the person to your left is a liar. Also the person sitting in your very seats is a liar.
We’re all liars. What I’m going to do today
is I’m going to show you what the research says about why we’re all liars,
how you can become a liespotter
and why you might want to go the extra mile
and go from liespotting to truth seeking,
and ultimately to trust building. Now, speaking of trust,
ever since I wrote this book, “Liespotting,”
no one wants to meet me in person anymore, no, no, no, no, no.
They say, “It’s okay, we’ll email you.”
(Laughter)
I can’t even get a coffee date at Starbucks. My husband’s like, “Honey, deception?
Maybe you could have focused on cooking. How about French cooking?”
So before I get started, what I’m going to do
is I’m going to clarify my goal for you,
which is not to teach a game of Gotcha. Liespotters aren’t those nitpicky kids,
those kids in the back of the room that are shouting, “Gotcha!
Gotcha! Your eyebrow twitched.
You flared your nostril. I watch that TV show ‘Lie To Me.’ I know you’re lying.”
No, liespotters are armed
with scientific knowledge of how to spot deception. They use it to get to the truth,
and they do what mature leaders do everyday;
they have difficult conversations with difficult people,
sometimes during very difficult times.
And they start up that path by accepting a core proposition,
and that proposition is the following:
Lying is a cooperative act. Think about it, a lie has no power whatsoever by its mere utterance.
Its power emerges
when someone else agrees to believe the lie. So I know it may sound like tough love,
but look, if at some point you got lied to,
it’s because you agreed to get lied to. Truth number one about lying: Lying’s a cooperative act.
Now not all lies are harmful. Sometimes we’re willing participants in deception
for the sake of social dignity,
maybe to keep a secret that should be kept secret, secret.
We say, “Nice song.”
“Honey, you don’t look fat in that, no.”
Or we say, favorite of the digiratti,
“You know, I just fished that email out of my Spam folder. So sorry.”
But there are times when we are unwilling participants in deception. And that can have dramatic costs for us.
Last year saw 997 billion dollars
in corporate fraud alone in the United States. That’s an eyelash under a trillion dollars.
That’s seven percent of revenues. Deception can cost billions. Think Enron, Madoff, the mortgage crisis.
Or in the case of double agents and traitors,
like Robert Hanssen or Aldrich Ames,
lies can betray our country,
they can compromise our security, they can undermine democracy,
they can cause the deaths of those that defend us. Deception is actually serious business.
This con man, Henry Oberlander, he was such an effective con man,
British authorities say
he could have undermined the entire banking system of the Western world. And you can’t find this guy on Google; you can’t find him anywhere. He was interviewed once, and he said the following.
He said, “Look, I’ve got one rule.”
And this was Henry’s rule, he said,
“Look, everyone is willing to give you something. They’re ready to give you something for whatever it is they’re hungry for.”
And that’s the crux of it.
If you don’t want to be deceived, you have to know,
what is it that you’re hungry for? And we all kind of hate to admit it. We wish we were better husbands, better wives,
smarter, more powerful, taller, richer —
the list goes on.
Lying is an attempt to bridge that gap,
to connect our wishes and our fantasies
about who we wish we were, how we wish we could be,
with what we’re really like. And boy are we willing to fill in those gaps in our lives with lies.
On a given day, studies show that you may be lied to
anywhere from 10 to 200 times. Now granted, many of those are white lies. But in another study,
it showed that strangers lied three times
within the first 10 minutes of meeting each other.
(Laughter)
Now when we first hear this data, we recoil.
We can’t believe how prevalent lying is. We’re essentially against lying.
But if you look more closely, the plot actually thickens. We lie more to strangers than we lie to coworkers. Extroverts lie more than introverts.
Men lie eight times more about themselves than they do other people. Women lie more to protect other people.
If you’re an average married couple,
you’re going to lie to your spouse in one out of every 10 interactions. Now, you may think that’s bad. If you’re unmarried, that number drops to three.
Lying’s complex. It’s woven into the fabric of our daily and our business lives.
We’re deeply ambivalent about the truth. We parse it out on an as-needed basis,
sometimes for very good reasons,
other times just because we don’t understand the gaps in our lives. That’s truth number two about lying.
We’re against lying,
but we’re covertly for it
in ways that our society has sanctioned for centuries and centuries and centuries. It’s as old as breathing.
It’s part of our culture, it’s part of our history. Think Dante, Shakespeare, the Bible, News of the World.
(Laughter)
Lying has evolutionary value to us as a species. Researchers have long known that the more intelligent the species,
the larger the neocortex,
the more likely it is to be deceptive.
Now you might remember Koko. Does anybody remember Koko the gorilla who was taught sign language?
Koko was taught to communicate via sign language. Here’s Koko with her kitten. It’s her cute little, fluffy pet kitten.
Koko once blamed her pet kitten for ripping a sink out of the wall.
(Laughter)
We’re hardwired to become leaders of the pack. It’s starts really, really early.
How early? Well babies will fake a cry,
pause, wait to see who’s coming
and then go right back to crying. One-year-olds learn concealment.
(Laughter)
Two-year-olds bluff.
Five-year-olds lie outright. They manipulate via flattery.
Nine-year-olds, masters of the cover-up. By the time you enter college,
you’re going to lie to your mom in one out of every five interactions. By the time we enter this work world and we’re breadwinners,
we enter a world that is just cluttered with Spam, fake digital friends,
partisan media,
ingenious identity thieves,
world-class Ponzi schemers,
a deception epidemic —
in short, what one author calls a post-truth society.
It’s been very confusing for a long time now. What do you do?
Well, there are steps we can take to navigate our way through the morass. Trained liespotters get to the truth 90 percent of the time. The rest of us, we’re only 54 percent accurate.
Why is it so easy to learn? There are good liars and bad liars.
There are no real original liars. We all make the same mistakes. We all use the same techniques.
So what I’m going to do is I’m going to show you two patterns of deception. And then we’re going to look at the hot spots
and see if we can find them ourselves.
We’re going to start with speech.
(Video) Bill Clinton: I want you to listen to me. I’m going to say this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.
I never told anybody to lie, not a single time, never. And these allegations are false.
And I need to go back to work for the American people. Thank you.
(Applause)
Pamela Meyer: Okay, what were the telltale signs? Well first we heard what’s known as a non-contracted denial.
Studies show that people who are overdetermined in their denial
will resort to formal rather than informal language. We also heard distancing language: “that woman.”
We know that liars will unconsciously distance themselves
from their subject,
using language as their tool.
Now if Bill Clinton had said, “Well, to tell you the truth …”
or Richard Nixon’s favorite, “In all candor …”
he would have been a dead giveaway
for any liespotter that knows
that qualifying language, as it’s called, qualifying language like that,
further discredits the subject. Now if he had repeated the question in its entirety,
or if he had peppered his account with a little too much detail —
and we’re all really glad he didn’t do that —
he would have further discredited himself. Freud had it right.
Freud said, look, there’s much more to it than speech:
“No mortal can keep a secret. If his lips are silent, he chatters with his fingertips.”
And we all do it no matter how powerful you are.
We all chatter with our fingertips. I’m going to show you Dominique Strauss-Kahn with Obama
who’s chattering with his fingertips.
(Laughter)
Now this brings us to our next pattern, which is body language. With body language, here’s what you’ve got to do.
You’ve really got to just throw your assumptions out the door. Let the science temper your knowledge a little bit.
Because we think liars fidget all the time. Well guess what, they’re known to freeze their upper bodies when they’re lying. We think liars won’t look you in the eyes.
Well guess what, they look you in the eyes a little too much
just to compensate for that myth. We think warmth and smiles convey honesty, sincerity.
But a trained liespotter can spot a fake smile a mile away. Can you all spot the fake smile here? You can consciously contract the muscles in your cheeks.
But the real smile’s in the eyes, the crow’s feet of the eyes. They cannot be consciously contracted,
especially if you overdid the Botox.
Don’t overdo the Botox; nobody will think you’re honest. Now we’re going to look at the hot spots. Can you tell what’s happening in a conversation?
Can you start to find the hot spots
to see the discrepancies
between someone’s words and someone’s actions? Now, I know it seems really obvious,
but when you’re having a conversation with someone you suspect of deception,
attitude is by far the most overlooked but telling of indicators.
An honest person is going to be cooperative. They’re going to show they’re on your side. They’re going to be enthusiastic.
They’re going to be willing and helpful to getting you to the truth. They’re going to be willing to brainstorm, name suspects,
provide details.
They’re going to say,
“Hey, maybe it was those guys in payroll that forged those checks.”
They’re going to be infuriated if they sense they’re wrongly accused
throughout the entire course of the interview, not just in flashes;
they’ll be infuriated throughout the entire course of the interview. And if you ask someone honest
what should happen to whomever did forge those checks,
an honest person is much more likely
to recommend strict rather than lenient punishment. Now let’s say you’re having that exact same conversation
with someone deceptive.
That person may be withdrawn,
look down, lower their voice,
pause, be kind of herky-jerky. Ask a deceptive person to tell their story,
they’re going to pepper it with way too much detail
in all kinds of irrelevant places.
And then they’re going to tell their story in strict chronological order. And what a trained interrogator does
is they come in and in very subtle ways over the course of several hours,
they will ask that person to tell that story backwards,
and then they’ll watch them squirm,
and track which questions produce the highest volume of deceptive tells. Why do they do that?
Well, we all do the same thing. We rehearse our words,
but we rarely rehearse our gestures.
We say “yes,” we shake our heads “no.”
We tell very convincing stories, we slightly shrug our shoulders. We commit terrible crimes,
and we smile at the delight in getting away with it. Now, that smile is known in the trade as “duping delight.”
And we’re going to see that in several videos moving forward,
but we’re going to start — for those of you who don’t know him,
this is presidential candidate John Edwards
who shocked America by fathering a child out of wedlock.
We’re going to see him talk about getting a paternity test. See now if you can spot him saying, “yes” while shaking his head “no,”
slightly shrugging his shoulders.
(Video) John Edwards: I’d be happy to participate in one.
I know that it’s not possible that this child could be mine,
because of the timing of events. So I know it’s not possible. Happy to take a paternity test, and would love to see it happen.
Interviewer: Are you going to do that soon? Is there somebody —
JE: Well, I’m only one side.
I’m only one side of the test. But I’m happy to participate in one. PM: Okay, those head shakes are much easier to spot
once you know to look for them.
There are going to be times when someone makes one expression
while masking another that just kind of leaks through in a flash. Murderers are known to leak sadness.
Your new joint venture partner might shake your hand,
celebrate, go out to dinner with you and then leak an expression of anger. And we’re not all going to become facial expression experts overnight here,
but there’s one I can teach you that’s very dangerous
and it’s easy to learn,
and that’s the expression of contempt. Now with anger, you’ve got two people on an even playing field.
It’s still somewhat of a healthy relationship. But when anger turns to contempt, you’ve been dismissed.
It’s associated with moral superiority. And for that reason, it’s very, very hard to recover from. Here’s what it looks like.
It’s marked by one lip corner pulled up and in. It’s the only asymmetrical expression.
And in the presence of contempt, whether or not deception follows —
and it doesn’t always follow —
look the other way, go the other direction,
reconsider the deal,
say, “No thank you. I’m not coming up for just one more nightcap. Thank you.”
Science has surfaced many, many more indicators.
We know, for example,
we know liars will shift their blink rate,
point their feet towards an exit. They will take barrier objects
and put them between themselves and the person that is interviewing them.
They’ll alter their vocal tone,
often making their vocal tone much lower. Now here’s the deal. These behaviors are just behaviors.
They’re not proof of deception. They’re red flags.
We’re human beings. We make deceptive flailing gestures all over the place all day long. They don’t mean anything in and of themselves.
But when you see clusters of them, that’s your signal. Look, listen, probe, ask some hard questions,
get out of that very comfortable mode of knowing,
walk into curiosity mode, ask more questions,
have a little dignity, treat the person you’re talking to with rapport.
Don’t try to be like those folks on “Law & Order” and those other TV shows
that pummel their subjects into submission. Don’t be too aggressive, it doesn’t work. Now, we’ve talked a little bit about how to talk to someone who’s lying
and how to spot a lie.
And as I promised, we’re now going to look at what the truth looks like. But I’m going to show you two videos,
two mothers — one is lying, one is telling the truth.
And these were surfaced by researcher David Matsumoto in California. And I think they’re an excellent example of what the truth looks like. This mother, Diane Downs,
shot her kids at close range,
drove them to the hospital while they bled all over the car,
claimed a scraggy-haired stranger did it.
And you’ll see when you see the video,
she can’t even pretend to be an agonizing mother. What you want to look for here is an incredible discrepancy
between horrific events that she describes and her very, very cool demeanor.
And if you look closely, you’ll see duping delight throughout this video.
(Video) Diane Downs: At night when I close my eyes,
I can see Christie reaching her hand out to me while I’m driving,
and the blood just kept coming out of her mouth. And that — maybe it’ll fade too with time —
but I don’t think so. That bothers me the most.
PM: Now I’m going to show you a video
of an actual grieving mother, Erin Runnion,
confronting her daughter’s murderer and torturer in court. Here you’re going to see no false emotion,
just the authentic expression of a mother’s agony.
(Video) Erin Runnion: I wrote this statement
on the third anniversary of the night you took my baby,
and you hurt her,
and you crushed her,
you terrified her until her heart stopped.
And she fought, and I know she fought you. But I know she looked at you with those amazing brown eyes,
and you still wanted to kill her. And I don’t understand it,
and I never will.
PM: Okay, there’s no doubting the veracity of those emotions. Now the technology around what the truth looks like
is progressing on, the science of it.
We know, for example,
that we now have specialized eye trackers and infrared brain scans,
MRI’s that can decode the signals that our bodies send out
when we’re trying to be deceptive. And these technologies are going to be marketed to all of us
as panaceas for deceit,
and they will prove incredibly useful some day. But you’ve got to ask yourself in the meantime:
Who do you want on your side of the meeting,
someone who’s trained in getting to the truth
or some guy who’s going to drag a 400-pound electroencephalogram
through the door?
Liespotters rely on human tools. They know, as someone once said,
“Character’s who you are in the dark.”
And what’s kind of interesting is that today, we have so little darkness.
Our world is lit up 24 hours a day. It’s transparent with blogs and social networks
broadcasting the buzz of a whole new generation of people
that have made a choice to live their lives in public. It’s a much more noisy world.
So one challenge we have is to remember,
oversharing, that’s not honesty. Our manic tweeting and texting can blind us
to the fact that the subtleties of human decency — character integrity —
that’s still what matters, that’s always what’s going to matter.
So in this much noisier world,
it might make sense for us
to be just a little bit more explicit about our moral code. When you combine the science of recognizing deception
with the art of looking, listening,
you exempt yourself from collaborating in a lie. You start up that path of being just a little bit more explicit,
because you signal to everyone around you,
you say, “Hey, my world, our world, it’s going to be an honest one.
My world is going to be one where truth is strengthened
and falsehood is recognized and marginalized.”
And when you do that,
the ground around you starts to shift just a little bit. And that’s the truth.
Thank you.
⚡ Learning goals
- Identify verbal and non‑verbal cues associated with deceptive behaviour.
- Evaluate attitude and detail as indicators during interviews.
- Compare truthful vs deceptive speech patterns and body language.
✨ Key language
- distancing language “He used distancing language to avoid responsibility.”
- qualifying language “To tell you the truth, it sounds rehearsed.”
- gesture–speech mismatch “She said ‘yes’ while shaking her head.”
⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures
1️⃣ Non‑contracted denial
Rule: Use formal, non‑contracted forms when over‑determined in a denial (e.g., “I did not…”).
Examples: {ex1a}; {ex1b}; {ex1c}
Common pitfall + fix: {pit1} — {fix1}.
Choose the best example:
Tip: Over‑formal denials may signal rehearsed language.
Fill with the best answer: I ___ have told you earlier.
Tip: Modals convey stance without hedging.
2️⃣ Distancing language
Rule: Speakers may distance from the subject using demonstratives and nouns (e.g., “that woman”).
Examples: {ex2a}; {ex2b}; {ex2c}
Common pitfall + fix: {pit2} — {fix2}.
Choose the best example:
Tip: Notice labels that create separation from responsibility.
Fill with the best answer: I ___ have told you earlier.
Tip: Modals convey stance without hedging.
3️⃣ Qualifying language
Rule: Prefacing with phrases like “to tell you the truth” can reduce credibility.
Examples: {ex3a}; {ex3b}; {ex3c}
Common pitfall + fix: {pit3} — {fix3}.
Choose the best example:
Tip: Remove qualifiers; state facts directly.
Fill with the best answer: I ___ have told you earlier.
Tip: Modals convey stance without hedging.
4️⃣ Gesture–speech mismatch
Rule: When words say “yes” but the head shakes “no,” trust the mismatch as a red flag.
Examples: {ex4a}; {ex4b}; {ex4c}
Common pitfall + fix: {pit4} — {fix4}.
Choose the best example:
Tip: Look for clusters of mismatches, not single slips.
Fill with the best answer: I ___ have told you earlier.
Tip: Modals convey stance without hedging.
✍️ Vocabulary
deception
Meaning: The act of deceiving; dishonesty.
Synonyms: dishonesty, deceit, trickery.
Chunk/Idiom: spot a lie.
Example: She exposed the deception in the report.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “deception” in a sentence about interviews.
contempt
Meaning: Deception related term.
Synonyms: disdain, scorn, derision.
Chunk/Idiom: read between the lines.
Example: His smirk showed clear contempt.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “contempt” in a sentence about interviews.
distancing language
Meaning: Deception related term.
Synonyms: detachment, remoteness, dissociation.
Chunk/Idiom: read between the lines.
Example: He used distancing language: that woman.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “distancing language” in a sentence about interviews.
qualifying language
Meaning: Deception related term.
Synonyms: hedging, softening, caveat.
Chunk/Idiom: read between the lines.
Example: He added qualifying language to sound sincere.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “qualifying language” in a sentence about interviews.
duping delight
Meaning: Deception related term.
Synonyms: glee, smugness, triumph.
Chunk/Idiom: read between the lines.
Example: The suspect showed duping delight on camera.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “duping delight” in a sentence about interviews.
non‑verbal cue
Meaning: Deception related term.
Synonyms: gesture, signal, indicator.
Chunk/Idiom: read between the lines.
Example: Watch for non‑verbal cues during interviews.
Morphology: noun.
Self-practice: Use “non‑verbal cue” in a sentence about interviews.
☁️ Examples (+ audio)
Lying is a cooperative act, not just a single utterance. Liars often use distancing language to separate themselves. Watch for gesture–speech mismatches when stories feel rehearsed. Clusters of red flags matter more than isolated behaviors.
✏️ Exercises
Grammar
Which sentence shows distancing language?
Tip: Demonstratives plus nouns create distance.
Which version is less credible due to qualifying language?
Tip: Avoid unnecessary qualifiers when stating facts.
Fill with the best answer: He ___ not sign the form, he says.
Tip: Non‑contracted denials may sound over‑formal.
Fill with the best answer: She said yes, but her head was shaking ___.
Tip: Notice gesture–speech mismatch.
Vocabulary & Comprehension
What is ‘duping delight’?
Tip: Look for smiles in incongruent contexts.
Truthful interviewees are more likely to:
Tip: Attitude and cooperation are key cues.
Fill with the best answer: He relied on ___ language to avoid blame.
Tip: Listen for labels that push subjects away.
Fill with the best answer: She added ___ language, which reduced credibility.
Tip: Hedging often weakens statements.
✅ Guided practice
Mini-dialogue:
A: What stood out in his story?
B: Too much irrelevant detail and a fixed chronology.
A: Any red flags in his body language?
B: Yes—he said “yes” while shaking his head.
Why this matters:
Spotting clusters of cues helps you avoid costly mistakes. It improves interviewing decisions and protects trust.
Verb & Adjective Pack:
evaluate — Evaluate attitude, not just words.
detect — Detect clusters of red flags.
rehearsed — His account sounded rehearsed.
incongruent — Her gestures were incongruent with her words.
Try & compare:
Fill with the best answer: The story stuck to strict ___.
Tip: Rehearsed stories follow time order too neatly.
Self-correction: Fix the sentence: I didn’t took the files.
Tip: Past simple with do-support: did + base verb.
Practice aloud: Listen, repeat, then type the sentence.
Lying is a cooperative act.
Tip: Say the full sentence before typing.