Cues to deception.
- B. Depaulo, James J. Lindsay, Brian E Malone, L. Muhlenbruck, K. Charlton, H. Cooper
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 2003
Results show that in some ways, liars are less forthcoming than truth tellers, and they tell less compelling tales, and their stories include fewer ordinary imperfections and unusual contents.
Accuracy of Deception Judgments
- C. F. Bond, B. Depaulo
- PsychologyPersonality and Social Psychology Review
- 1 August 2006
It is proposed that people judge others' deceptions more harshly than their own and that this double standard in evaluating deceit can explain much of the accumulated literature.
Lying in everyday life.
- B. Depaulo, D. Kashy, S. Kirkendol, M. Wyer, J. A. Epstein
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1 May 1996
Participants said that they did not regard their lies as serious and did not plan them much or worry about being caught, still, social interactions in which lies were told were less pleasant and less intimate than those in which no lie was told.
Nonverbal behavior and self-presentation.
- B. Depaulo
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 1 March 1992
The literatures on people's skills at using their nonverbal behaviors to feign internal states and to deceive are reviewed as they pertain to the question of whether people can overcome the many constraints on the translation of their intentions into expressions.
Do people know how others view them? An empirical and theoretical account.
- D. A. Kenny, B. Depaulo
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 1 July 1993
It is argued that people determine how others view them not from the feedback that they receive from others but from their own self-perceptions and that people overestimate the degree of consistency in the ways that different targets view them.
Singles in Society and in Science
- B. Depaulo, Wendy L. Morris
- Psychology
- 2005
We suggest that single adults in contemporary American society are targets of stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination, a phenomenon we will call singlism. Singlism is an outgrowth of a largely…
Everyday lies in close and casual relationships.
- B. Depaulo, D. Kashy
- Psychology, SociologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1998
It is predicted and found that participants would tell fewer lies per social interaction to the people to whom they felt closer and would feel more uncomfortable when they did lie to those people, and that lies told to closer partners were more often discovered.
Individual differences in judging deception: accuracy and bias.
- C. F. Bond, B. Depaulo
- PsychologyPsychological bulletin
- 1 July 2008
A meta-analysis of individual differences in detecting deception, confining attention to occasions when people judge strangers' veracity in real-time with no special aids, reveals that the outcome of a deception judgment depends more on the liar's credibility than any other individual difference.
Telling lies.
- B. Depaulo, R. Rosenthal
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1979
A histrionic strategy (hamming) was very effective in deceiving others, and this strategy was employed more by more Machiavellian people, who also tended to get caught less often in their lies.
Singled Out: How Singles Are Stereotyped, Stigmatized, and Ignored, and Still Live Happily Ever After
- B. Depaulo
- Political Science
- 14 November 2006
People who are single are changing the face of America. Did you know that: * More than 40 percent of the nation's adults---over 87 million people---are divorced, widowed, or have always been single.…
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