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TED Talks - Most Popular - How to spot a liar

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On any given day we're lied to from 10 to 200 times, and the clues to detect those lies can be subtle and counter-intuitive. Pamela Meyer, author of "Liespotting," shows the manners and "hotspots" used by those trained to recognize deception -- and she argues honesty is a value worth preserving. (Contains mature content)

Okay,
now
I
don't
want
to
alarm
anybody
in
this
room,
but
it's
just
come
to
my
attention
that
the
person
to
your
right
is
a
liar.
(Laughter)
Also,
the
person
to
your
left
is
a
liar.
Also
the
person
sitting
in
your
very
seats
is
a
liar.
We're
all
liars.
What
I'm
going
to
do
today
is
I'm
going
to
show
you
what
the
research
says
about
why
we're
all
liars,
how
you
can
become
a
liespotter
and
why
you
might
want
to
go
the
extra
mile
and
go
from
liespotting
to
truth
seeking,
and
ultimately
to
trust
building.
Now,
speaking
of
trust,
ever
since
I
wrote
this
book,
"Liespotting,"
no
one
wants
to
meet
me
in
person
anymore,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no.
They
say,
"It's
okay,
we'll
email
you."
(Laughter)
I
can't
even
get
a
coffee
date
at
Starbucks.
My
husband's
like,
"Honey,
deception?
Maybe
you
could
have
focused
on
cooking.
How
about
French
cooking?"
So
before
I
get
started,
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
clarify
my
goal
for
you,
which
is
not
to
teach
a
game
of
Gotcha.
Liespotters
aren't
those
nitpicky
kids,
those
kids
in
the
back
of
the
room
that
are
shouting,
"Gotcha!
Gotcha!
Your
eyebrow
twitched.
You
flared
your
nostril.
I
watch
that
TV
show
'Lie
To
Me.'
I
know
you're
lying."
No,
liespotters
are
armed
with
scientific
knowledge
of
how
to
spot
deception.
They
use
it
to
get
to
the
truth,
and
they
do
what
mature
leaders
do
everyday;
they
have
difficult
conversations
with
difficult
people,
sometimes
during
very
difficult
times.
And
they
start
up
that
path
by
accepting
a
core
proposition,
and
that
proposition
is
the
following:
Lying
is
a
cooperative
act.
Think
about
it,
a
lie
has
no
power
whatsoever
by
its
mere
utterance.
Its
power
emerges
when
someone
else
agrees
to
believe
the
lie.
So
I
know
it
may
sound
like
tough
love,
but
look,
if
at
some
point
you
got
lied
to,
it's
because
you
agreed
to
get
lied
to.
Truth
number
one
about
lying:
Lying's
a
cooperative
act.
Now
not
all
lies
are
harmful.
Sometimes
we're
willing
participants
in
deception
for
the
sake
of
social
dignity,
maybe
to
keep
a
secret
that
should
be
kept
secret,
secret.
We
say,
"Nice
song."
"Honey,
you
don't
look
fat
in
that,
no."
Or
we
say,
favorite
of
the
digiratti,
"You
know,
I
just
fished
that
email
out
of
my
Spam
folder.
So
sorry."
But
there
are
times
when
we
are
unwilling
participants
in
deception.
And
that
can
have
dramatic
costs
for
us.
Last
year
saw
997
billion
dollars
in
corporate
fraud
alone
in
the
United
States.
That's
an
eyelash
under
a
trillion
dollars.
That's
seven
percent
of
revenues.
Deception
can
cost
billions.
Think
Enron,
Madoff,
the
mortgage
crisis.
Or
in
the
case
of
double
agents
and
traitors,
like
Robert
Hanssen
or
Aldrich
Ames,
lies
can
betray
our
country,
they
can
compromise
our
security,
they
can
undermine
democracy,
they
can
cause
the
deaths
of
those
that
defend
us.
Deception
is
actually
serious
business.
This
con
man,
Henry
Oberlander,
he
was
such
an
effective
con
man,
British
authorities
say
he
could
have
undermined
the
entire
banking
system
of
the
Western
world.
And
you
can't
find
this
guy
on
Google;
you
can't
find
him
anywhere.
He
was
interviewed
once,
and
he
said
the
following.
He
said,
"Look,
I've
got
one
rule."
And
this
was
Henry's
rule,
he
said,
"Look,
everyone
is
willing
to
give
you
something.
They're
ready
to
give
you
something
for
whatever
it
is
they're
hungry
for."
And
that's
the
crux
of
it.
If
you
don't
want
to
be
deceived,
you
have
to
know,
what
is
it
that
you're
hungry
for?
And
we
all
kind
of
hate
to
admit
it.
We
wish
we
were
better
husbands,
better
wives,
smarter,
more
powerful,
taller,
richer
--
the
list
goes
on.
Lying
is
an
attempt
to
bridge
that
gap,
to
connect
our
wishes
and
our
fantasies
about
who
we
wish
we
were,
how
we
wish
we
could
be,
with
what
we're
really
like.
And
boy
are
we
willing
to
fill
in
those
gaps
in
our
lives
with
lies.
On
a
given
day,
studies
show
that
you
may
be
lied
to
anywhere
from
10
to
200
times.
Now
granted,
many
of
those
are
white
lies.
But
in
another
study,
it
showed
that
strangers
lied
three
times
within
the
first
10
minutes
of
meeting
each
other.
(Laughter)
Now
when
we
first
hear
this
data,
we
recoil.
We
can't
believe
how
prevalent
lying
is.
We're
essentially
against
lying.
But
if
you
look
more
closely,
the
plot
actually
thickens.
We
lie
more
to
strangers
than
we
lie
to
coworkers.
Extroverts
lie
more
than
introverts.
Men
lie
eight
times
more
about
themselves
than
they
do
other
people.
Women
lie
more
to
protect
other
people.
If
you're
an
average
married
couple,
you're
going
to
lie
to
your
spouse
in
one
out
of
every
10
interactions.
Now,
you
may
think
that's
bad.
If
you're
unmarried,
that
number
drops
to
three.
Lying's
complex.
It's
woven
into
the
fabric
of
our
daily
and
our
business
lives.
We're
deeply
ambivalent
about
the
truth.
We
parse
it
out
on
an
as-needed
basis,
sometimes
for
very
good
reasons,
other
times
just
because
we
don't
understand
the
gaps
in
our
lives.
That's
truth
number
two
about
lying.
We're
against
lying,
but
we're
covertly
for
it
in
ways
that
our
society
has
sanctioned
for
centuries
and
centuries
and
centuries.
It's
as
old
as
breathing.
It's
part
of
our
culture,
it's
part
of
our
history.
Think
Dante,
Shakespeare,
the
Bible,
News
of
the
World.
(Laughter)
Lying
has
evolutionary
value
to
us
as
a
species.
Researchers
have
long
known
that
the
more
intelligent
the
species,
the
larger
the
neocortex,
the
more
likely
it
is
to
be
deceptive.
Now
you
might
remember
Koko.
Does
anybody
remember
Koko
the
gorilla
who
was
taught
sign
language?
Koko
was
taught
to
communicate
via
sign
language.
Here's
Koko
with
her
kitten.
It's
her
cute
little,
fluffy
pet
kitten.
Koko
once
blamed
her
pet
kitten
for
ripping
a
sink
out
of
the
wall.
(Laughter)
We're
hardwired
to
become
leaders
of
the
pack.
It's
starts
really,
really
early.
How
early?
Well
babies
will
fake
a
cry,
pause,
wait
to
see
who's
coming
and
then
go
right
back
to
crying.
One-year-olds
learn
concealment.
(Laughter)
Two-year-olds
bluff.
Five-year-olds
lie
outright.
They
manipulate
via
flattery.
Nine-year-olds,
masters
of
the
cover-up.
By
the
time
you
enter
college,
you're
going
to
lie
to
your
mom
in
one
out
of
every
five
interactions.
By
the
time
we
enter
this
work
world
and
we're
breadwinners,
we
enter
a
world
that
is
just
cluttered
with
Spam,
fake
digital
friends,
partisan
media,
ingenious
identity
thieves,
world-class
Ponzi
schemers,
a
deception
epidemic
--
in
short,
what
one
author
calls
a
post-truth
society.
It's
been
very
confusing
for
a
long
time
now.
What
do
you
do?
Well,
there
are
steps
we
can
take
to
navigate
our
way
through
the
morass.
Trained
liespotters
get
to
the
truth
90
percent
of
the
time.
The
rest
of
us,
we're
only
54
percent
accurate.
Why
is
it
so
easy
to
learn?
There
are
good
liars
and
bad
liars.
There
are
no
real
original
liars.
We
all
make
the
same
mistakes.
We
all
use
the
same
techniques.
So
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
show
you
two
patterns
of
deception.
And
then
we're
going
to
look
at
the
hot
spots
and
see
if
we
can
find
them
ourselves.
We're
going
to
start
with
speech.
(Video)
Bill
Clinton:
I
want
you
to
listen
to
me.
I'm
going
to
say
this
again.
I
did
not
have
sexual
relations
with
that
woman,
Miss
Lewinsky.
I
never
told
anybody
to
lie,
not
a
single
time,
never.
And
these
allegations
are
false.
And
I
need
to
go
back
to
work
for
the
American
people.
Thank
you.
(Applause)
Pamela
Meyer:
Okay,
what
were
the
telltale
signs?
Well
first
we
heard
what's
known
as
a
non-contracted
denial.
Studies
show
that
people
who
are
overdetermined
in
their
denial
will
resort
to
formal
rather
than
informal
language.
We
also
heard
distancing
language:
"that
woman."
We
know
that
liars
will
unconsciously
distance
themselves
from
their
subject,
using
language
as
their
tool.
Now
if
Bill
Clinton
had
said,
"Well,
to
tell
you
the
truth
..."
or
Richard
Nixon's
favorite,
"In
all
candor
..."
he
would
have
been
a
dead
giveaway
for
any
liespotter
that
knows
that
qualifying
language,
as
it's
called,
qualifying
language
like
that,
further
discredits
the
subject.
Now
if
he
had
repeated
the
question
in
its
entirety,
or
if
he
had
peppered
his
account
with
a
little
too
much
detail
--
and
we're
all
really
glad
he
didn't
do
that
--
he
would
have
further
discredited
himself.
Freud
had
it
right.
Freud
said,
look,
there's
much
more
to
it
than
speech:
"No
mortal
can
keep
a
secret.
If
his
lips
are
silent,
he
chatters
with
his
fingertips."
And
we
all
do
it
no
matter
how
powerful
you
are.
We
all
chatter
with
our
fingertips.
I'm
going
to
show
you
Dominique
Strauss-Kahn
with
Obama
who's
chattering
with
his
fingertips.
(Laughter)
Now
this
brings
us
to
our
next
pattern,
which
is
body
language.
With
body
language,
here's
what
you've
got
to
do.
You've
really
got
to
just
throw
your
assumptions
out
the
door.
Let
the
science
temper
your
knowledge
a
little
bit.
Because
we
think
liars
fidget
all
the
time.
Well
guess
what,
they're
known
to
freeze
their
upper
bodies
when
they're
lying.
We
think
liars
won't
look
you
in
the
eyes.
Well
guess
what,
they
look
you
in
the
eyes
a
little
too
much
just
to
compensate
for
that
myth.
We
think
warmth
and
smiles
convey
honesty,
sincerity.
But
a
trained
liespotter
can
spot
a
fake
smile
a
mile
away.
Can
you
all
spot
the
fake
smile
here?
You
can
consciously
contract
the
muscles
in
your
cheeks.
But
the
real
smile's
in
the
eyes,
the
crow's
feet
of
the
eyes.
They
cannot
be
consciously
contracted,
especially
if
you
overdid
the
Botox.
Don't
overdo
the
Botox;
nobody
will
think
you're
honest.
Now
we're
going
to
look
at
the
hot
spots.
Can
you
tell
what's
happening
in
a
conversation?
Can
you
start
to
find
the
hot
spots
to
see
the
discrepancies
between
someone's
words
and
someone's
actions?
Now,
I
know
it
seems
really
obvious,
but
when
you're
having
a
conversation
with
someone
you
suspect
of
deception,
attitude
is
by
far
the
most
overlooked
but
telling
of
indicators.
An
honest
person
is
going
to
be
cooperative.
They're
going
to
show
they're
on
your
side.
They're
going
to
be
enthusiastic.
They're
going
to
be
willing
and
helpful
to
getting
you
to
the
truth.
They're
going
to
be
willing
to
brainstorm,
name
suspects,
provide
details.
They're
going
to
say,
"Hey,
maybe
it
was
those
guys
in
payroll
that
forged
those
checks."
They're
going
to
be
infuriated
if
they
sense
they're
wrongly
accused
throughout
the
entire
course
of
the
interview,
not
just
in
flashes;
they'll
be
infuriated
throughout
the
entire
course
of
the
interview.
And
if
you
ask
someone
honest
what
should
happen
to
whomever
did
forge
those
checks,
an
honest
person
is
much
more
likely
to
recommend
strict
rather
than
lenient
punishment.
Now
let's
say
you're
having
that
exact
same
conversation
with
someone
deceptive.
That
person
may
be
withdrawn,
look
down,
lower
their
voice,
pause,
be
kind
of
herky-jerky.
Ask
a
deceptive
person
to
tell
their
story,
they're
going
to
pepper
it
with
way
too
much
detail
in
all
kinds
of
irrelevant
places.
And
then
they're
going
to
tell
their
story
in
strict
chronological
order.
And
what
a
trained
interrogator
does
is
they
come
in
and
in
very
subtle
ways
over
the
course
of
several
hours,
they
will
ask
that
person
to
tell
that
story
backwards,
and
then
they'll
watch
them
squirm,
and
track
which
questions
produce
the
highest
volume
of
deceptive
tells.
Why
do
they
do
that?
Well,
we
all
do
the
same
thing.
We
rehearse
our
words,
but
we
rarely
rehearse
our
gestures.
We
say
"yes,"
we
shake
our
heads
"no."
We
tell
very
convincing
stories,
we
slightly
shrug
our
shoulders.
We
commit
terrible
crimes,
and
we
smile
at
the
delight
in
getting
away
with
it.
Now,
that
smile
is
known
in
the
trade
as
"duping
delight."
And
we're
going
to
see
that
in
several
videos
moving
forward,
but
we're
going
to
start
--
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
him,
this
is
presidential
candidate
John
Edwards
who
shocked
America
by
fathering
a
child
out
of
wedlock.
We're
going
to
see
him
talk
about
getting
a
paternity
test.
See
now
if
you
can
spot
him
saying,
"yes"
while
shaking
his
head
"no,"
slightly
shrugging
his
shoulders.
(Video)
John
Edwards:
I'd
be
happy
to
participate
in
one.
I
know
that
it's
not
possible
that
this
child
could
be
mine,
because
of
the
timing
of
events.
So
I
know
it's
not
possible.
Happy
to
take
a
paternity
test,
and
would
love
to
see
it
happen.
Interviewer:
Are
you
going
to
do
that
soon?
Is
there
somebody
--
JE:
Well,
I'm
only
one
side.
I'm
only
one
side
of
the
test.
But
I'm
happy
to
participate
in
one.
PM:
Okay,
those
head
shakes
are
much
easier
to
spot
once
you
know
to
look
for
them.
There
are
going
to
be
times
when
someone
makes
one
expression
while
masking
another
that
just
kind
of
leaks
through
in
a
flash.
Murderers
are
known
to
leak
sadness.
Your
new
joint
venture
partner
might
shake
your
hand,
celebrate,
go
out
to
dinner
with
you
and
then
leak
an
expression
of
anger.
And
we're
not
all
going
to
become
facial
expression
experts
overnight
here,
but
there's
one
I
can
teach
you
that's
very
dangerous
and
it's
easy
to
learn,
and
that's
the
expression
of
contempt.
Now
with
anger,
you've
got
two
people
on
an
even
playing
field.
It's
still
somewhat
of
a
healthy
relationship.
But
when
anger
turns
to
contempt,
you've
been
dismissed.
It's
associated
with
moral
superiority.
And
for
that
reason,
it's
very,
very
hard
to
recover
from.
Here's
what
it
looks
like.
It's
marked
by
one
lip
corner
pulled
up
and
in.
It's
the
only
asymmetrical
expression.
And
in
the
presence
of
contempt,
whether
or
not
deception
follows
--
and
it
doesn't
always
follow
--
look
the
other
way,
go
the
other
direction,
reconsider
the
deal,
say,
"No
thank
you.
I'm
not
coming
up
for
just
one
more
nightcap.
Thank
you."
Science
has
surfaced
many,
many
more
indicators.
We
know,
for
example,
we
know
liars
will
shift
their
blink
rate,
point
their
feet
towards
an
exit.
They
will
take
barrier
objects
and
put
them
between
themselves
and
the
person
that
is
interviewing
them.
They'll
alter
their
vocal
tone,
often
making
their
vocal
tone
much
lower.
Now
here's
the
deal.
These
behaviors
are
just
behaviors.
They're
not
proof
of
deception.
They're
red
flags.
We're
human
beings.
We
make
deceptive
flailing
gestures
all
over
the
place
all
day
long.
They
don't
mean
anything
in
and
of
themselves.
But
when
you
see
clusters
of
them,
that's
your
signal.
Look,
listen,
probe,
ask
some
hard
questions,
get
out
of
that
very
comfortable
mode
of
knowing,
walk
into
curiosity
mode,
ask
more
questions,
have
a
little
dignity,
treat
the
person
you're
talking
to
with
rapport.
Don't
try
to
be
like
those
folks
on
"Law
&
Order"
and
those
other
TV
shows
that
pummel
their
subjects
into
submission.
Don't
be
too
aggressive,
it
doesn't
work.
Now,
we've
talked
a
little
bit
about
how
to
talk
to
someone
who's
lying
and
how
to
spot
a
lie.
And
as
I
promised,
we're
now
going
to
look
at
what
the
truth
looks
like.
But
I'm
going
to
show
you
two
videos,
two
mothers
--
one
is
lying,
one
is
telling
the
truth.
And
these
were
surfaced
by
researcher
David
Matsumoto
in
California.
And
I
think
they're
an
excellent
example
of
what
the
truth
looks
like.
This
mother,
Diane
Downs,
shot
her
kids
at
close
range,
drove
them
to
the
hospital
while
they
bled
all
over
the
car,
claimed
a
scraggy-haired
stranger
did
it.
And
you'll
see
when
you
see
the
video,
she
can't
even
pretend
to
be
an
agonizing
mother.
What
you
want
to
look
for
here
is
an
incredible
discrepancy
between
horrific
events
that
she
describes
and
her
very,
very
cool
demeanor.
And
if
you
look
closely,
you'll
see
duping
delight
throughout
this
video.
(Video)
Diane
Downs:
At
night
when
I
close
my
eyes,
I
can
see
Christie
reaching
her
hand
out
to
me
while
I'm
driving,
and
the
blood
just
kept
coming
out
of
her
mouth.
And
that
--
maybe
it'll
fade
too
with
time
--
but
I
don't
think
so.
That
bothers
me
the
most.
PM:
Now
I'm
going
to
show
you
a
video
of
an
actual
grieving
mother,
Erin
Runnion,
confronting
her
daughter's
murderer
and
torturer
in
court.
Here
you're
going
to
see
no
false
emotion,
just
the
authentic
expression
of
a
mother's
agony.
(Video)
Erin
Runnion:
I
wrote
this
statement
on
the
third
anniversary
of
the
night
you
took
my
baby,
and
you
hurt
her,
and
you
crushed
her,
you
terrified
her
until
her
heart
stopped.
And
she
fought,
and
I
know
she
fought
you.
But
I
know
she
looked
at
you
with
those
amazing
brown
eyes,
and
you
still
wanted
to
kill
her.
And
I
don't
understand
it,
and
I
never
will.
PM:
Okay,
there's
no
doubting
the
veracity
of
those
emotions.
Now
the
technology
around
what
the
truth
looks
like
is
progressing
on,
the
science
of
it.
We
know,
for
example,
that
we
now
have
specialized
eye
trackers
and
infrared
brain
scans,
MRI's
that
can
decode
the
signals
that
our
bodies
send
out
when
we're
trying
to
be
deceptive.
And
these
technologies
are
going
to
be
marketed
to
all
of
us
as
panaceas
for
deceit,
and
they
will
prove
incredibly
useful
some
day.
But
you've
got
to
ask
yourself
in
the
meantime:
Who
do
you
want
on
your
side
of
the
meeting,
someone
who's
trained
in
getting
to
the
truth
or
some
guy
who's
going
to
drag
a
400-pound
electroencephalogram
through
the
door?
Liespotters
rely
on
human
tools.
They
know,
as
someone
once
said,
"Character's
who
you
are
in
the
dark."
And
what's
kind
of
interesting
is
that
today,
we
have
so
little
darkness.
Our
world
is
lit
up
24
hours
a
day.
It's
transparent
with
blogs
and
social
networks
broadcasting
the
buzz
of
a
whole
new
generation
of
people
that
have
made
a
choice
to
live
their
lives
in
public.
It's
a
much
more
noisy
world.
So
one
challenge
we
have
is
to
remember,
oversharing,
that's
not
honesty.
Our
manic
tweeting
and
texting
can
blind
us
to
the
fact
that
the
subtleties
of
human
decency
--
character
integrity
--
that's
still
what
matters,
that's
always
what's
going
to
matter.
So
in
this
much
noisier
world,
it
might
make
sense
for
us
to
be
just
a
little
bit
more
explicit
about
our
moral
code.
When
you
combine
the
science
of
recognizing
deception
with
the
art
of
looking,
listening,
you
exempt
yourself
from
collaborating
in
a
lie.
You
start
up
that
path
of
being
just
a
little
bit
more
explicit,
because
you
signal
to
everyone
around
you,
you
say,
"Hey,
my
world,
our
world,
it's
going
to
be
an
honest
one.
My
world
is
going
to
be
one
where
truth
is
strengthened
and
falsehood
is
recognized
and
marginalized."
And
when
you
do
that,
the
ground
around
you
starts
to
shift
just
a
little
bit.
And
that's
the
truth.
Thank
you.
(Applause)
Check out more TED Talks - Most Popular

See below for the full transcript

Okay, now I don't want to alarm anybody in this room, but it's just come to my attention that the person to your right is a liar. (Laughter) Also, the person to your left is a liar. Also the person sitting in your very seats is a liar. We're all liars. What I'm going to do today is I'm going to show you what the research says about why we're all liars, how you can become a liespotter and why you might want to go the extra mile and go from liespotting to truth seeking, and ultimately to trust building. Now, speaking of trust, ever since I wrote this book, "Liespotting," no one wants to meet me in person anymore, no, no, no, no, no. They say, "It's okay, we'll email you." (Laughter) I can't even get a coffee date at Starbucks. My husband's like, "Honey, deception? Maybe you could have focused on cooking. How about French cooking?" So before I get started, what I'm going to do is I'm going to clarify my goal for you, which is not to teach a game of Gotcha. Liespotters aren't those nitpicky kids, those kids in the back of the room that are shouting, "Gotcha! Gotcha! Your eyebrow twitched. You flared your nostril. I watch that TV show 'Lie To Me.' I know you're lying." No, liespotters are armed with scientific knowledge of how to spot deception. They use it to get to the truth, and they do what mature leaders do everyday; they have difficult conversations with difficult people, sometimes during very difficult times. And they start up that path by accepting a core proposition, and that proposition is the following: Lying is a cooperative act. Think about it, a lie has no power whatsoever by its mere utterance. Its power emerges when someone else agrees to believe the lie. So I know it may sound like tough love, but look, if at some point you got lied to, it's because you agreed to get lied to. Truth number one about lying: Lying's a cooperative act. Now not all lies are harmful. Sometimes we're willing participants in deception for the sake of social dignity, maybe to keep a secret that should be kept secret, secret. We say, "Nice song." "Honey, you don't look fat in that, no." Or we say, favorite of the digiratti, "You know, I just fished that email out of my Spam folder. So sorry." But there are times when we are unwilling participants in deception. And that can have dramatic costs for us. Last year saw 997 billion dollars in corporate fraud alone in the United States. That's an eyelash under a trillion dollars. That's seven percent of revenues. Deception can cost billions. Think Enron, Madoff, the mortgage crisis. Or in the case of double agents and traitors, like Robert Hanssen or Aldrich Ames, lies can betray our country, they can compromise our security, they can undermine democracy, they can cause the deaths of those that defend us. Deception is actually serious business. This con man, Henry Oberlander, he was such an effective con man, British authorities say he could have undermined the entire banking system of the Western world. And you can't find this guy on Google; you can't find him anywhere. He was interviewed once, and he said the following. He said, "Look, I've got one rule." And this was Henry's rule, he said, "Look, everyone is willing to give you something. They're ready to give you something for whatever it is they're hungry for." And that's the crux of it. If you don't want to be deceived, you have to know, what is it that you're hungry for? And we all kind of hate to admit it. We wish we were better husbands, better wives, smarter, more powerful, taller, richer -- the list goes on. Lying is an attempt to bridge that gap, to connect our wishes and our fantasies about who we wish we were, how we wish we could be, with what we're really like. And boy are we willing to fill in those gaps in our lives with lies. On a given day, studies show that you may be lied to anywhere from 10 to 200 times. Now granted, many of those are white lies. But in another study, it showed that strangers lied three times within the first 10 minutes of meeting each other. (Laughter) Now when we first hear this data, we recoil. We can't believe how prevalent lying is. We're essentially against lying. But if you look more closely, the plot actually thickens. We lie more to strangers than we lie to coworkers. Extroverts lie more than introverts. Men lie eight times more about themselves than they do other people. Women lie more to protect other people. If you're an average married couple, you're going to lie to your spouse in one out of every 10 interactions. Now, you may think that's bad. If you're unmarried, that number drops to three. Lying's complex. It's woven into the fabric of our daily and our business lives. We're deeply ambivalent about the truth. We parse it out on an as-needed basis, sometimes for very good reasons, other times just because we don't understand the gaps in our lives. That's truth number two about lying. We're against lying, but we're covertly for it in ways that our society has sanctioned for centuries and centuries and centuries. It's as old as breathing. It's part of our culture, it's part of our history. Think Dante, Shakespeare, the Bible, News of the World. (Laughter) Lying has evolutionary value to us as a species. Researchers have long known that the more intelligent the species, the larger the neocortex, the more likely it is to be deceptive. Now you might remember Koko. Does anybody remember Koko the gorilla who was taught sign language? Koko was taught to communicate via sign language. Here's Koko with her kitten. It's her cute little, fluffy pet kitten. Koko once blamed her pet kitten for ripping a sink out of the wall. (Laughter) We're hardwired to become leaders of the pack. It's starts really, really early. How early? Well babies will fake a cry, pause, wait to see who's coming and then go right back to crying. One-year-olds learn concealment. (Laughter) Two-year-olds bluff. Five-year-olds lie outright. They manipulate via flattery. Nine-year-olds, masters of the cover-up. By the time you enter college, you're going to lie to your mom in one out of every five interactions. By the time we enter this work world and we're breadwinners, we enter a world that is just cluttered with Spam, fake digital friends, partisan media, ingenious identity thieves, world-class Ponzi schemers, a deception epidemic -- in short, what one author calls a post-truth society. It's been very confusing for a long time now. What do you do? Well, there are steps we can take to navigate our way through the morass. Trained liespotters get to the truth 90 percent of the time. The rest of us, we're only 54 percent accurate. Why is it so easy to learn? There are good liars and bad liars. There are no real original liars. We all make the same mistakes. We all use the same techniques. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to show you two patterns of deception. And then we're going to look at the hot spots and see if we can find them ourselves. We're going to start with speech. (Video) Bill Clinton: I want you to listen to me. I'm going to say this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky. I never told anybody to lie, not a single time, never. And these allegations are false. And I need to go back to work for the American people. Thank you. (Applause) Pamela Meyer: Okay, what were the telltale signs? Well first we heard what's known as a non-contracted denial. Studies show that people who are overdetermined in their denial will resort to formal rather than informal language. We also heard distancing language: "that woman." We know that liars will unconsciously distance themselves from their subject, using language as their tool. Now if Bill Clinton had said, "Well, to tell you the truth ..." or Richard Nixon's favorite, "In all candor ..." he would have been a dead giveaway for any liespotter that knows that qualifying language, as it's called, qualifying language like that, further discredits the subject. Now if he had repeated the question in its entirety, or if he had peppered his account with a little too much detail -- and we're all really glad he didn't do that -- he would have further discredited himself. Freud had it right. Freud said, look, there's much more to it than speech: "No mortal can keep a secret. If his lips are silent, he chatters with his fingertips." And we all do it no matter how powerful you are. We all chatter with our fingertips. I'm going to show you Dominique Strauss-Kahn with Obama who's chattering with his fingertips. (Laughter) Now this brings us to our next pattern, which is body language. With body language, here's what you've got to do. You've really got to just throw your assumptions out the door. Let the science temper your knowledge a little bit. Because we think liars fidget all the time. Well guess what, they're known to freeze their upper bodies when they're lying. We think liars won't look you in the eyes. Well guess what, they look you in the eyes a little too much just to compensate for that myth. We think warmth and smiles convey honesty, sincerity. But a trained liespotter can spot a fake smile a mile away. Can you all spot the fake smile here? You can consciously contract the muscles in your cheeks. But the real smile's in the eyes, the crow's feet of the eyes. They cannot be consciously contracted, especially if you overdid the Botox. Don't overdo the Botox; nobody will think you're honest. Now we're going to look at the hot spots. Can you tell what's happening in a conversation? Can you start to find the hot spots to see the discrepancies between someone's words and someone's actions? Now, I know it seems really obvious, but when you're having a conversation with someone you suspect of deception, attitude is by far the most overlooked but telling of indicators. An honest person is going to be cooperative. They're going to show they're on your side. They're going to be enthusiastic. They're going to be willing and helpful to getting you to the truth. They're going to be willing to brainstorm, name suspects, provide details. They're going to say, "Hey, maybe it was those guys in payroll that forged those checks." They're going to be infuriated if they sense they're wrongly accused throughout the entire course of the interview, not just in flashes; they'll be infuriated throughout the entire course of the interview. And if you ask someone honest what should happen to whomever did forge those checks, an honest person is much more likely to recommend strict rather than lenient punishment. Now let's say you're having that exact same conversation with someone deceptive. That person may be withdrawn, look down, lower their voice, pause, be kind of herky-jerky. Ask a deceptive person to tell their story, they're going to pepper it with way too much detail in all kinds of irrelevant places. And then they're going to tell their story in strict chronological order. And what a trained interrogator does is they come in and in very subtle ways over the course of several hours, they will ask that person to tell that story backwards, and then they'll watch them squirm, and track which questions produce the highest volume of deceptive tells. Why do they do that? Well, we all do the same thing. We rehearse our words, but we rarely rehearse our gestures. We say "yes," we shake our heads "no." We tell very convincing stories, we slightly shrug our shoulders. We commit terrible crimes, and we smile at the delight in getting away with it. Now, that smile is known in the trade as "duping delight." And we're going to see that in several videos moving forward, but we're going to start -- for those of you who don't know him, this is presidential candidate John Edwards who shocked America by fathering a child out of wedlock. We're going to see him talk about getting a paternity test. See now if you can spot him saying, "yes" while shaking his head "no," slightly shrugging his shoulders. (Video) John Edwards: I'd be happy to participate in one. I know that it's not possible that this child could be mine, because of the timing of events. So I know it's not possible. Happy to take a paternity test, and would love to see it happen. Interviewer: Are you going to do that soon? Is there somebody -- JE: Well, I'm only one side. I'm only one side of the test. But I'm happy to participate in one. PM: Okay, those head shakes are much easier to spot once you know to look for them. There are going to be times when someone makes one expression while masking another that just kind of leaks through in a flash. Murderers are known to leak sadness. Your new joint venture partner might shake your hand, celebrate, go out to dinner with you and then leak an expression of anger. And we're not all going to become facial expression experts overnight here, but there's one I can teach you that's very dangerous and it's easy to learn, and that's the expression of contempt. Now with anger, you've got two people on an even playing field. It's still somewhat of a healthy relationship. But when anger turns to contempt, you've been dismissed. It's associated with moral superiority. And for that reason, it's very, very hard to recover from. Here's what it looks like. It's marked by one lip corner pulled up and in. It's the only asymmetrical expression. And in the presence of contempt, whether or not deception follows -- and it doesn't always follow -- look the other way, go the other direction, reconsider the deal, say, "No thank you. I'm not coming up for just one more nightcap. Thank you." Science has surfaced many, many more indicators. We know, for example, we know liars will shift their blink rate, point their feet towards an exit. They will take barrier objects and put them between themselves and the person that is interviewing them. They'll alter their vocal tone, often making their vocal tone much lower. Now here's the deal. These behaviors are just behaviors. They're not proof of deception. They're red flags. We're human beings. We make deceptive flailing gestures all over the place all day long. They don't mean anything in and of themselves. But when you see clusters of them, that's your signal. Look, listen, probe, ask some hard questions, get out of that very comfortable mode of knowing, walk into curiosity mode, ask more questions, have a little dignity, treat the person you're talking to with rapport. Don't try to be like those folks on "Law & Order" and those other TV shows that pummel their subjects into submission. Don't be too aggressive, it doesn't work. Now, we've talked a little bit about how to talk to someone who's lying and how to spot a lie. And as I promised, we're now going to look at what the truth looks like. But I'm going to show you two videos, two mothers -- one is lying, one is telling the truth. And these were surfaced by researcher David Matsumoto in California. And I think they're an excellent example of what the truth looks like. This mother, Diane Downs, shot her kids at close range, drove them to the hospital while they bled all over the car, claimed a scraggy-haired stranger did it. And you'll see when you see the video, she can't even pretend to be an agonizing mother. What you want to look for here is an incredible discrepancy between horrific events that she describes and her very, very cool demeanor. And if you look closely, you'll see duping delight throughout this video. (Video) Diane Downs: At night when I close my eyes, I can see Christie reaching her hand out to me while I'm driving, and the blood just kept coming out of her mouth. And that -- maybe it'll fade too with time -- but I don't think so. That bothers me the most. PM: Now I'm going to show you a video of an actual grieving mother, Erin Runnion, confronting her daughter's murderer and torturer in court. Here you're going to see no false emotion, just the authentic expression of a mother's agony. (Video) Erin Runnion: I wrote this statement on the third anniversary of the night you took my baby, and you hurt her, and you crushed her, you terrified her until her heart stopped. And she fought, and I know she fought you. But I know she looked at you with those amazing brown eyes, and you still wanted to kill her. And I don't understand it, and I never will. PM: Okay, there's no doubting the veracity of those emotions. Now the technology around what the truth looks like is progressing on, the science of it. We know, for example, that we now have specialized eye trackers and infrared brain scans, MRI's that can decode the signals that our bodies send out when we're trying to be deceptive. And these technologies are going to be marketed to all of us as panaceas for deceit, and they will prove incredibly useful some day. But you've got to ask yourself in the meantime: Who do you want on your side of the meeting, someone who's trained in getting to the truth or some guy who's going to drag a 400-pound electroencephalogram through the door? Liespotters rely on human tools. They know, as someone once said, "Character's who you are in the dark." And what's kind of interesting is that today, we have so little darkness. Our world is lit up 24 hours a day. It's transparent with blogs and social networks broadcasting the buzz of a whole new generation of people that have made a choice to live their lives in public. It's a much more noisy world. So one challenge we have is to remember, oversharing, that's not honesty. Our manic tweeting and texting can blind us to the fact that the subtleties of human decency -- character integrity -- that's still what matters, that's always what's going to matter. So in this much noisier world, it might make sense for us to be just a little bit more explicit about our moral code. When you combine the science of recognizing deception with the art of looking, listening, you exempt yourself from collaborating in a lie. You start up that path of being just a little bit more explicit, because you signal to everyone around you, you say, "Hey, my world, our world, it's going to be an honest one. My world is going to be one where truth is strengthened and falsehood is recognized and marginalized." And when you do that, the ground around you starts to shift just a little bit. And that's the truth. Thank you. (Applause)

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