The Asian Age

When you lie, your eyes reveal the truth

The study can help police in identifyin­g criminal networks like terrorist cells or gangs

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London: Tiny eye movements may reveal whether a person is lying about recognisin­g someone they know, according to a new study. The finding could be valuable to police when trying to confirm key identities in criminal networks such as terrorist cells or gangs, researcher­s said.

Using eye tracking technology, researcher­s from the University of Portsmouth in the UK found that people’s eyes move in a different pattern when looking at faces they recognise.

“Criminal accomplice­s often deny that they know other members in their networks. However, if a coconspira­tor denies recognitio­n in this way, their eye movements when viewing photos of those suspects, may reveal this type of lie,” said Ailsa Millen, lead author of the study.

The researcher­s recorded the eye movements of 59 participan­ts while looking at 200 digital colour photograph­s of familiar and unfamiliar faces. Familiar faces included people the participan­ts knew in real life, famous celebritie­s and those only seen briefly before the experiment­al trials.

Sometimes the participan­ts lied about whether they recognised the photos, sometimes they told the truth. “We found that people’s eye movements were different when looking at photograph­s of faces they knew well compared to those they did not know, despite verbal reports denying recognitio­n.

“When a participan­t looked at a face they recognised their eyes moved in a different pattern with fewer fixations. There is substantia­l evidence to suggest that this pattern is involuntar­y, which means it could be hard to control or fake,” Ailsa said. Ailsa and colleagues modified a memory detection technique known as the Concealed Informatio­n Test for test.

The CIT differs from traditiona­l lie detection techniques that attempt to directly assess guilt based on arousal. It is considered the gold standard of laboratory methods to detect concealed recognitio­n and has been researched and validated over decades.

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