A Metascientific Empirical Review of Cognitive Load Lie Detection

Neequaye, David A. (2022) A Metascientific Empirical Review of Cognitive Load Lie Detection. Collabra: Psychology, 8 (1): 57508. ISSN 2474-7394

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Abstract

This article examines the cognitive load lie detection hypothesis. The idea that lying is more challenging than telling the truth—thus, imposing cognitive load can exacerbate the challenge liars face and expose lies. I reviewed 24 publications to flag derivation chains authors employ to justify the hypothesis. The findings indicate that authors recycle the same set of justifications but not systematically. That state of the literature shields cognitive load lie detection from severe testing in two ways. There is no clear justification to focus on when wanting to nominate or design severe tests. And the justifications contain ambiguities that make it challenging to determine what would count as a severe test of the hypothesis. I illustrate those limitations and discuss the need to make cognitive load lie detection amenable to severe testing.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Collabra: Psychology
Subjects:
?? cognitive loadinvestigative interviewinglie detectionlyingtruth-tellingderivation chainsevere-testing ??
ID Code:
210932
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
04 Dec 2023 12:00
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
05 Dec 2023 01:39