1 00:00:09,205 --> 00:00:11,195 "Sorry, my phone died." 2 00:00:11,195 --> 00:00:13,494 "It's nothing. I'm fine." 3 00:00:13,494 --> 00:00:16,847 "These allegations are completely unfounded." 4 00:00:16,847 --> 00:00:20,799 "The company was not aware of any wrongdoing." 5 00:00:20,799 --> 00:00:23,543 "I love you." 6 00:00:23,543 --> 00:00:26,656 We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day, 7 00:00:26,656 --> 00:00:30,022 and we spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect them, 8 00:00:30,022 --> 00:00:32,700 from medieval torture devices to polygraphs, 9 00:00:32,700 --> 00:00:36,042 blood pressure and breathing monitors, voice stress analyzers, 10 00:00:36,042 --> 00:00:38,725 eye trackers, infrared brain scanners, 11 00:00:38,725 --> 00:00:42,324 and even the 400-pound electroencephalogram. 12 00:00:42,324 --> 00:00:45,296 But although such tools have worked under certain cirumstances, 13 00:00:45,296 --> 00:00:48,156 most can be fooled with enough preparation, 14 00:00:48,156 --> 00:00:52,121 and none are considered reliable enough to even be admissible in court. 15 00:00:52,121 --> 00:00:54,665 But, what if the problem is not with the techniques, 16 00:00:54,665 --> 00:00:59,066 but the underlying assumption that lying spurs physiological changes? 17 00:00:59,066 --> 00:01:01,071 What if we took a more direct approach, 18 00:01:01,071 --> 00:01:05,146 using communication science to analyze the lies themselves? 19 00:01:05,146 --> 00:01:09,983 On a psychological level, we lie partly to paint a better picture of ourselves, 20 00:01:09,983 --> 00:01:12,859 connecting our fantasies to the person we wish we were 21 00:01:12,859 --> 00:01:15,317 rather than the person we are. 22 00:01:15,317 --> 00:01:19,569 But while our brain is busy dreaming, it's letting plenty of signals slip by. 23 00:01:19,569 --> 00:01:23,728 Our conscious mind only controls about 5% of our cognitive function, 24 00:01:23,728 --> 00:01:25,288 including communication, 25 00:01:25,288 --> 00:01:28,931 while the other 95% occurs beyond our awareness, 26 00:01:28,931 --> 00:01:31,874 and according to the literature on reality monitoring, 27 00:01:31,874 --> 00:01:34,236 stories based on imagined experiences 28 00:01:34,236 --> 00:01:38,117 are qualitatively different from those based on real experiences. 29 00:01:38,117 --> 00:01:42,143 This suggests that creating a false story about a personal topic takes work 30 00:01:42,143 --> 00:01:45,226 and results in a different pattern of language use. 31 00:01:45,226 --> 00:01:48,231 A technology known as linguistic text analysis 32 00:01:48,231 --> 00:01:50,955 has helped to identify four such common patterns 33 00:01:50,955 --> 00:01:53,942 in the subconscious language of deception. 34 00:01:53,942 --> 00:01:58,497 First, liars reference themselves less, when making deceptive statements. 35 00:01:58,497 --> 00:02:02,248 They write or talk more about others, often using the third person 36 00:02:02,248 --> 00:02:05,509 to distance and disassociate themselves from their lie, 37 00:02:05,509 --> 00:02:07,158 which sounds more false: 38 00:02:07,158 --> 00:02:09,990 "Absolutely no party took place at this house," 39 00:02:09,990 --> 00:02:13,178 or "I didn't host a party here." 40 00:02:13,178 --> 00:02:15,757 Second, liars tend to be more negative, 41 00:02:15,757 --> 00:02:19,262 because on a subconscious level, they feel guilty about lying. 42 00:02:19,262 --> 00:02:21,422 For example, a liar might say something like, 43 00:02:21,422 --> 00:02:25,613 "Sorry, my stupid phone battery died. I hate that thing." 44 00:02:25,613 --> 00:02:28,877 Third, liars typically explain events in simple terms 45 00:02:28,877 --> 00:02:32,155 since our brains struggle to build a complex lie. 46 00:02:32,155 --> 00:02:33,329 Judgement and evaluation 47 00:02:33,329 --> 00:02:36,183 are complex things for our brains to compute. 48 00:02:36,183 --> 00:02:38,678 As a U.S. President once famously insisted: 49 00:02:38,678 --> 00:02:41,790 "I did not have sexual relations with that woman." 50 00:02:41,790 --> 00:02:44,683 And finally, even though liars keep descriptions simple, 51 00:02:44,683 --> 00:02:48,158 they tend to use longer and more convoluted sentence structure, 52 00:02:48,158 --> 00:02:49,764 inserting unnecessary words 53 00:02:49,764 --> 00:02:53,500 and irrelevant but factual sounding details in order to pad the lie. 54 00:02:53,500 --> 00:02:56,164 Another President confronted with a scandal proclaimed: 55 00:02:56,164 --> 00:02:59,534 "I can say, categorically, that this investigation indicates 56 00:02:59,534 --> 00:03:01,321 that no one on the White House staff, 57 00:03:01,321 --> 00:03:03,700 no one in this administration presently employed 58 00:03:03,700 --> 00:03:06,919 was involved in this very bizarre incident." 59 00:03:06,919 --> 00:03:10,188 Let's apply linguistic analysis to some famous examples. 60 00:03:10,188 --> 00:03:13,444 Take seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong. 61 00:03:13,444 --> 00:03:15,397 When comparing a 2005 interview, 62 00:03:15,397 --> 00:03:18,274 in which he had denied taking performance-enhancing drugs 63 00:03:18,274 --> 00:03:21,212 to a 2013 interview, in which he admitted it, 64 00:03:21,212 --> 00:03:25,192 his use of personal pronouns increased by nearly 3/4. 65 00:03:25,192 --> 00:03:27,859 Note the contrast between the following two quotes. 66 00:03:27,859 --> 00:03:32,170 First: "Okay, you know, a guy in a French, in a Parisian laboratory 67 00:03:32,170 --> 00:03:36,131 opens up your sample, you know, Jean-Francis so-and-so, and he tests it. 68 00:03:36,131 --> 00:03:38,816 And then you get a phone call from a newspaper that says: 69 00:03:38,816 --> 00:03:43,129 'We found you to be positive six times for EPO." 70 00:03:43,129 --> 00:03:45,028 Second: "I lost myself in all of that. 71 00:03:45,028 --> 00:03:47,947 I'm sure there would be other people that couldn't handle it, 72 00:03:47,947 --> 00:03:49,728 but I certainly couldn't handle it, 73 00:03:49,728 --> 00:03:52,750 and I was used to controlling everything in my life. 74 00:03:52,750 --> 00:03:55,412 I controlled every outcome in my life." 75 00:03:55,412 --> 00:03:58,318 In his denial, Armstrong described a hypothetical situation 76 00:03:58,318 --> 00:04:00,321 focused on someone else, 77 00:04:00,321 --> 00:04:03,003 removing himself from the situation entirely. 78 00:04:03,003 --> 00:04:04,980 In his admission, he owns his statements, 79 00:04:04,980 --> 00:04:08,609 delving into his personal emotions and motivations. 80 00:04:08,609 --> 00:04:12,576 But the use of personal pronouns is just one indicator of deception. 81 00:04:12,576 --> 00:04:14,909 Let's look at another example from former Senator 82 00:04:14,909 --> 00:04:17,984 and U.S. Presidential candidate John Edwards: 83 00:04:17,984 --> 00:04:20,662 "I only know that the apparent father has said publicly 84 00:04:20,662 --> 00:04:22,678 that he is the father of the baby. 85 00:04:22,678 --> 00:04:25,714 I also have not been engaged in any activity of any description 86 00:04:25,714 --> 00:04:29,172 that requested, agreed to, or supported payments of any kind 87 00:04:29,172 --> 00:04:32,377 to the woman or to the apparent father of the baby." 88 00:04:32,377 --> 00:04:36,420 Not only is that a pretty long-winded way to say, "The baby isn't mine," 89 00:04:36,420 --> 00:04:39,330 but Edwards never calls the other parties by name, 90 00:04:39,330 --> 00:04:43,163 instead saying "that baby," "the woman," and "the apparent father." 91 00:04:43,163 --> 00:04:46,216 Now let's see what he had to say when later admitting paternity: 92 00:04:46,216 --> 00:04:47,767 "I am Quinn's father. 93 00:04:47,767 --> 00:04:50,048 I will do everything in my power to provide her 94 00:04:50,048 --> 00:04:52,967 with the love and support she deserves." 95 00:04:52,967 --> 00:04:54,768 The statement is short and direct, 96 00:04:54,768 --> 00:04:58,327 calling the child by name and addressing his role in her life. 97 00:04:58,327 --> 00:05:01,558 So how can you apply these lie-spotting techniques to your life? 98 00:05:01,558 --> 00:05:05,219 First, remember that many of the lies we encounter on a daily basis 99 00:05:05,219 --> 00:05:09,844 are far less serious that these examples, and may even be harmless. 100 00:05:09,844 --> 00:05:12,528 But it's still worthwhile to be aware of telltale clues, 101 00:05:12,528 --> 00:05:16,240 like minimal self-references, negative language, 102 00:05:16,240 --> 00:05:19,518 simple explanations and convoluted phrasing. 103 00:05:19,518 --> 00:05:22,843 It just might help you avoid an overvalued stock, 104 00:05:22,843 --> 00:05:26,333 an ineffective product, or even a terrible relationship.