The Number of Senders and Total Judgments Matter More Than Sample Size in Deception-Detection Experiments

  1. Levine, Timothy R. 1
  2. Masip, Jaume 2
  3. Daiku, Yasuhiro 3
  1. 1 Department of Communication Studies, University of Alabama Birmingham
  2. 2 Universidad de Salamanca
    info

    Universidad de Salamanca

    Salamanca, España

    ROR https://ror.org/02f40zc51

  3. 3 Graduate School of Human Sciences, Osaka University
Revista:
Perspectives on Psychological Science

ISSN: 1745-6916 1745-6924

Año de publicación: 2021

Páginas: 174569162199036

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1177/1745691621990369 GOOGLE SCHOLAR

Otras publicaciones en: Perspectives on Psychological Science

Resumen

Hundreds of experiments have examined people’s ability to distinguish truths from lies. Meta-analyses suggest that the findings from larger scale experiments converge and that findings discrepant from the meta-analytic average of 54% occur in only smaller experiments. Study size (number of data points, or total number of judgments) is a joint function of the sample size and the number of judgments per research participant. Furthermore, because senders vary more than judges, experiments involving few senders may not be replicable. A number of simulations are reported in which the sample size, the number of unique senders, and the number of judgments per research participant are varied. The findings demonstrate that stability is more a function of the number of judgments than the sample size and that experiments involving too few senders risk idiosyncratic findings that are less likely to be replicable. Implications for research design are discussed.

Referencias bibliográficas

  • Aamodt M. G., (2006), Forensic Examiner, 15, pp. 6
  • Levine T. R., (2020), Duped: Truth-default theory and the social science of lying and deception