Ray Bull
University of Derby
266 Papers
2.4K Citations
Ray Bull is an academic researcher from University of Derby. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interview & Cognitive interview. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 255 publications. Previous affiliations of Ray Bull include John Wiley & Sons & City of Glasgow College.
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Papers
Increasing Cognitive Load to Facilitate Lie Detection: The Benefit of Recalling an Event in Reverse Order
TL;DR: The hypotheses that the difference between liars and truth tellers will be greater when interviewees report their stories in reverse order than in chronological order are tested and instructing interviewees to recall their stories to facilitate detecting deception are tested.
507
Detecting Deceit via Analysis of Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior
TL;DR: This article examined the hypotheses that nonverbal behavior could be useful in the detection of deceit and that lie detection would be most accurate if both verbal and nonverbal indicators of deception are taken into account.
Detecting true lies: police officers' ability to detect suspects' lies.
TL;DR: Accuracy and confidence were not significantly correlated, but the level of confidence was dependent on whether officers judged actual truths or actual lies and on the method by which confidence was measured.
•Book
The Social Psychology of Facial Appearance
Ray Bull,Nichola Rumsey +1 more
- 01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this article, it was argued that facial information is usually the first that is available to the perceiver, but also that it is continuously available during social interaction, and that people tend to see others as integrated and consistent units, rather than as collections of situation-specific behaviors.
349
Children's everyday deception and performance on false-belief tasks
TL;DR: This paper showed that the variety and incidence of everyday deception reported by mothers did not relate to success or failure on a battery of false-belief tasks, either between different children or over time in the same children.
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