Hadoblado
think again losers
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- Joined
- Mar 17, 2011
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- 7,065
And how do you know how good you are?
I've generally acted in such a way that it wasn't important for me to know whether people were lying. It never felt like that important a skill - but recently it's somewhat of an hobby level obsession.
We've covered it a fair bit in a unit at university: psychology and the law. Apparently people tend to wildly overestimate their ability to spot a lie. Even people that have a professional investment in it (such as police) tend to not do better than 60%, though some uber-specialised professionals are up around 70%. IIRC the average is around 55%.
One of the obstacles to improvement is that it's pretty rare to get 100% bonified proof that it's a lie or a truth, and people tend to fill the blanks with what they'd prefer to believe.
A lot of the heuristics people commonly believe to be true (to the point that they're used in police interrogation manuals) have either not been shown to have any relationship to lying, or have been shown to have no relationship with lying. One that somewhat shocked me was signs that a person is anxious has no weight in whether a person is lying.
There is also a fairly heavy experience bias. People that deal with liars a lot (prison inmates, police) tend to assume people are lying (and vice versa).
So I've been playing a lot of games that require you to spot lies. I've been playing werewolf at the local nerdstore (waaay different to mafia), I've been playing coup (simple but great game) with friends. I've been watching 'would I lie to you' (celebrity panel show) which has been very interesting.
I think it appeals to me because it turns every conversation into a potential puzzle.
Anyway:
1) how good at spotting lies are you? How do you know this?
2) how good of a liar are you?
3) do you know any good games (or other) that help train this skill?
4) are there any particular things you look for?
I've generally acted in such a way that it wasn't important for me to know whether people were lying. It never felt like that important a skill - but recently it's somewhat of an hobby level obsession.
We've covered it a fair bit in a unit at university: psychology and the law. Apparently people tend to wildly overestimate their ability to spot a lie. Even people that have a professional investment in it (such as police) tend to not do better than 60%, though some uber-specialised professionals are up around 70%. IIRC the average is around 55%.
One of the obstacles to improvement is that it's pretty rare to get 100% bonified proof that it's a lie or a truth, and people tend to fill the blanks with what they'd prefer to believe.
A lot of the heuristics people commonly believe to be true (to the point that they're used in police interrogation manuals) have either not been shown to have any relationship to lying, or have been shown to have no relationship with lying. One that somewhat shocked me was signs that a person is anxious has no weight in whether a person is lying.
There is also a fairly heavy experience bias. People that deal with liars a lot (prison inmates, police) tend to assume people are lying (and vice versa).
So I've been playing a lot of games that require you to spot lies. I've been playing werewolf at the local nerdstore (waaay different to mafia), I've been playing coup (simple but great game) with friends. I've been watching 'would I lie to you' (celebrity panel show) which has been very interesting.
I think it appeals to me because it turns every conversation into a potential puzzle.
Anyway:
1) how good at spotting lies are you? How do you know this?
2) how good of a liar are you?
3) do you know any good games (or other) that help train this skill?
4) are there any particular things you look for?