“Sorry, my phone died.”
“It’s nothing. I’m fine.”
“These allegations are completely unfounded.”
“The company was not aware of any wrongdoing.”
“I love you.”
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day,
and we spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect them,
from medieval torture devices to polygraphs,
blood-pressure and breathing monitors, voice-stress analyzers,
eye trackers, infrared brain scanners,
and even the 400-pound electroencephalogram.
But although such tools have worked under certain circumstances,
most can be fooled with enough preparation,
and none are considered reliable enough to even be admissible in court.
But, what if the problem is not with the techniques,
but the underlying assumption that lying spurs physiological changes?
What if we took a more direct approach,
using communication science to analyze the lies themselves?
On a psychological level, we lie partly to paint a better picture of ourselves,
connecting our fantasies to the person we wish we were
rather than the person we are.
But while our brain is busy dreaming, it’s letting plenty of signals slip by.
Our conscious mind only controls about 5% of our cognitive function,
including communication,
while the other 95% occurs beyond our awareness,
and according to the literature on reality monitoring,
stories based on imagined experiences
are qualitatively different from those based on real experiences.
This suggests that creating a false story about a personal topic takes work
and results in a different pattern of language use.
A technology known as linguistic text analysis
has helped to identify four such common patterns
in the subconscious language of deception.
First, liars reference themselves less, when making deceptive statements.
They write or talk more about others, often using the third person
to distance and disassociate themselves from their lie,
which sounds more false:
“Absolutely no party took place at this house,”
or “I didn’t host a party here.”
Second, liars tend to be more negative,
because on a subconscious level, they feel guilty about lying.
For example, a liar might say something like,
“Sorry, my stupid phone battery died. I hate that thing.”
Third, liars typically explain events in simple terms
since our brains struggle to build a complex lie.
Judgment and evaluation
are complex things for our brains to compute.
As a U.S. President once famously insisted:
“I did not have sexual relations with that woman.”
And finally, even though liars keep descriptions simple,
they tend to use longer and more convoluted sentence structure,
inserting unnecessary words
and irrelevant but factual sounding details in order to pad the lie.
Another President confronted with a scandal proclaimed:
“I can say, categorically, that this investigation indicates
that no one on the White House staff,
no one in this administration presently employed
was involved in this very bizarre incident.”
Let’s apply linguistic analysis to some famous examples.
Take seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong.
When comparing a 2005 interview,
in which he had denied taking performance-enhancing drugs
to a 2013 interview, in which he admitted it,
his use of personal pronouns increased by nearly 3/4.
Note the contrast between the following two quotes.
First: “Okay, you know, a guy in a French, in a Parisian laboratory
opens up your sample, you know, Jean-Francis so-and-so, and he tests it.
And then you get a phone call from a newspaper that says:
‘We found you to be positive six times for EPO.”
Second: “I lost myself in all of that.
I’m sure there would be other people that couldn’t handle it,
but I certainly couldn’t handle it,
and I was used to controlling everything in my life.
I controlled every outcome in my life.”
In his denial, Armstrong described a hypothetical situation
focused on someone else,
removing himself from the situation entirely.
In his admission, he owns his statements,
delving into his personal emotions and motivations.
But the use of personal pronouns is just one indicator of deception.
Let’s look at another example from former Senator
and U.S. Presidential candidate John Edwards:
“I only know that the apparent father has said publicly
that he is the father of the baby.
I also have not been engaged in any activity of any description
that requested, agreed to, or supported payments of any kind
to the woman or to the apparent father of the baby.”
Not only is that a pretty long-winded way to say, “The baby isn’t mine,”
but Edwards never calls the other parties by name,
instead saying “that baby,” “the woman,” and “the apparent father.”
Now let’s see what he had to say when later admitting paternity:
“I am Quinn’s father.
I will do everything in my power to provide her
with the love and support she deserves.”
The statement is short and direct,
calling the child by name and addressing his role in her life.
So how can you apply these lie-spotting techniques to your life?
First, remember that many of the lies we encounter on a daily basis
are far less serious that these examples, and may even be harmless.
But it’s still worthwhile to be aware of telltale clues,
like minimal self-references, negative language,
simple explanations and convoluted phrasing.
It just might help you avoid an overvalued stock,
an ineffective product, or even a terrible relationship.