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How to Improve Your Deception Detection Skills


How to Improve Your Deception Detection Skills

Chapter 8: How to Detect Deception in Investigation Interviews

Posted by Dawn Lomer on July 25th, 2011

Chapter 1: History of Detecting Deception

Chapter 2: Reading the Signs of Deception

Chapter 3: Setting a Baseline

Chapter 4: Forms of Deception

Chapter 5: Language Indicators of Deception

Chapter 6: The Role of Anxiety in Deception

Chapter 7: Body Language

Chapter 8: How to Improve Your Deception Detection Skills

Practical exercises are helpful in aiding investigators in developing their interviewing skills. It’s hard to duplicate an interview, as someone playing a role has nothing to lose. Adding a stressor to the practice interview can help.

Get local theatre groups involved, as this gives investigators an opportunity to interview someone they don’t know. Videotape the practice sessions and play them back for the investigator to learn from.

Watch people. Go to a shopping mall or public park and observe how they interact, their physical movements and how they behave in different situations. Become a student of human behavior so that you have a wide variety of examples to use as reference.

Read as much as you can on the subject, keeping an open mind and understanding that there is no surefire way to detect deception. Practice and experience are the keys to becoming a better detector of deception.

Dawn Lomer
Dawn Lomer

Manager of Communications

Dawn Lomer is the Manager of Communications at i-Sight (now Case IQ) Software and a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE). She writes about topics related to workplace investigations, ethics and compliance, data security and e-discovery, and hosts i-Sight (now Case IQ) webinars.