Most workplace lies (and liars) are discovered after the fact – after you’ve signed the faulty contract, hired the wrong person or agreed to work on that career-limiting project.
Wouldn’t it be great (as well as a professional advantage) to spot liars in action, before the harm was done?
To sharpen your lie-detection ability, follow these guidelines:
Begin with a baseline
The first and most important step in deception detection is observing a person’s baseline behaviour under relaxed or generally stress-free conditions so later you can spot those meaningful deviations that signal stress and possible deception.
While you’re chatting informally, notice how people’s bodies look when they’re relaxed. (What’s their normal amount of eye contact and blink rate? What kind of gestures do they use most frequently? What postures do they assume when comfortable? What’s their pace of speech and tone of voice?)
Watch for the initial signs of stress
There’s no single verbal or non-verbal behaviour that automatically means a person is lying. In fact, much of lie detection is actually stress detection.
The mind has to work a lot harder to generate a false response. In order to tell a lie, the brain first has to stop itself from telling the truth, then create the deception, and then deal with the accompanying emotions of anxiety, guilt and the fear of being caught. So, for the vast majority of individuals, lying triggers a heightened stress response. Blood pressure, heart rate and breathing rates all increase.
To relieve this nervous tension, liars may use pacifying gestures (rubbing their necks, bouncing their heels, fidgeting with jewelry, etc.). Their feet may even point to the door in a signal that they would like to escape. But our first response to stress (before we ready ourselves to fight or flee) is to freeze. So pay attention if your usually animated colleague suddenly stops gesturing, has a forced or frozen smile, holds her breath or tightly locks her ankles.
By the way, the biggest myth around deception is that liars can’t look you in the eyes. Some don’t (especially small children), but polished liars may actually give too much eye contact. Two eye signals that are more accurate signs of stress and potential dishonesty are pupil dilation and a change in blink rate.
Listen carefully to what people are telling you
People may tell you the (literal) truth. If your boss says, “I’m thinking of recommending you for the position,” that’s exactly what she means. She hasn’t said she did recommend you. She hasn’t said she will recommend you. All she said is that she’s thinking about doing so. If a colleague states, “That’s all I can tell you,” believe him. He can’t or won’t tell you more … but remember, that doesn’t mean this is all he knows.
People’s choice of words often reveals more about them than they realize. When describing a situation, truthful people tend to use assertive, unambiguous words such as “steal,” “cheat,” “forge.” Liars use softer words like “borrow,” “mistake,” “omit” to minimize the act. A liar’s language also tends to become awkwardly formal and stilted, characterized especially by the avoidance of commonly used contractions. A liar might say, “I did not have sex with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky,” rather than “I didn’t have sex with Monica.”
Because of the mental effort it takes to tell a bald-faced lie, many people prefer to circumvent the truth with selective wording. They may avoid answering your question exactly as asked or say something that sounds like a denial but isn’t. If you accused a liar of spreading malicious gossip about a co-worker, he might respond, “Do I look like someone who would do that?” instead of saying “I didn’t do it.”
Liars may even go into attack mode and try to impeach your credibility or competence with statements meant to put you off-track or even to intimidate: “Why are you wasting my time with this stuff?” or “Do you know how long I’ve been doing this job?”
Stay especially alert when people tell you what they are not doing (“I don’t want you to take this the wrong way,” or “It’s not that I have anything to hide.”). Most often, that’s a lie. Of course, you’ll have greater success in detecting verbal deceit cues if you and the person you’re dealing with are from the same culture and speak the same language.
Stay alert for emotional faking
Seven basic emotions are shared, recognized and expressed the same way around the world. Discovered and categorized by psychologist Paul Ekman and his colleagues at the University of California, San Francisco, the universal emotional expressions are joy, surprise, sadness, anger, fear, disgust and contempt.
When people don’t genuinely feel the emotion they’re trying to display, it often shows up in expressions that don’t use all the muscles in the face that are typically part of that emotion. For example, if someone’s smile doesn’t include the eye muscles, it is not a felt smile. Genuine smiles crinkle the corners of your eyes and change your entire face. Faked smiles involve the mouth only and are often asymmetrical.
In monitoring emotional reactions, look also for simulated emotions, where people try to convince others that they feel a certain way by simulating the facial expression associated with that feeling. You may even get a gut feeling that your colleague’s terribly sincere furrowed-brow or exaggerated display of anger feels somehow excessive.
Realize, too, that any expression you see displayed for more than five to 10 seconds is almost certainly being faked.
Notice incongruence
When thoughts and words are in sync (when people believe what they’re saying), you can see it in their body language as their gestures, facial expressions and body postures fall into natural alignment with their verbal messages.
Incongruence occurs when someone’s non-verbal behaviour contradicts her words – such as a side-to-side head-shake while saying “yes” or a slight shoulder shrug (a sign of uncertainty) when assuring you they’re “absolutely positive.”
Often, verbal/non-verbal incongruence is a sign of intentional deceit. At the very least, it shows that there is an inner conflict of some sort between what the person is thinking and what she’s saying.
Look for the telltale four
Non-verbal cues often occur in what is called a gesture cluster – a group of movements, postures and actions that reinforce a common point. Clusters play a key role in your growing ability to spot lies. A single non-verbal cue can have several meanings or mean nothing at all, but when it’s reinforced by at least two other non-verbal signals, the meaning becomes more apparent.
According to research by David DeSteno of Northeastern University, there’s one specific cluster of non-verbal cues that proved statistically to be a highly accurate indicator of deception. The telltale four body language signals associated with duplicity are hand rubbing, face touching, crossing arms and leaning away.
Recognize the issues that interfere with your ability to detect falsehoods
The act of lying triggers a heightened and observable stress response in most people – but not always:
- Not all people display the same degree of emotion.
- Not all liars (especially if polished or pathological) show any signs of stress or guilt.
- Not all lies trigger a stress reaction (social lies, for example, are so much a part of daily life that they hardly ever distress the sender).
- Not all stress signals indicate a lie. Truthful people may exhibit anxiety for a variety of perfectly innocent reasons – including the fear of not being believed, or discomfort speaking about embarrassing or emotionally arousing topics.
Remember, too, that sometimes our own biases get in the way. Research shows that surprisingly small factors – such as where we meet someone, what they wear, what their voices sound like, whether their posture mimics ours, if they mention the names of people we know or admire, if they flatter us, if they are attractive and charming, or if they remind us of ourselves – can enhance their credibility to the extent that it nullifies our ability to make sound judgments about them.
When we put our trust in a deceptive co-worker or hire someone we haven’t properly investigated, it may not be due to their skill as a liar, but more about our own unconscious biases, vanities, desires and self-deceptions.
So this year, resolve to spot liars in action – before the harm is done.
Carol Kinsey Goman, PhD, is an executive coach, consultant, and international keynote speaker at corporate, government, and association events. She is also the author of STAND OUT: How to Build Your Leadership Presence.
The views, opinions and positions expressed by columnists and contributors are the author’s alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of our publication.