The Daily Telegraph

It’s all there in black and white for police to spot liars

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

THE world’s first lie detector test for written statements has been developed by British experts to weed out untrue claims, and avoid wasting police time.

The system uses a combinatio­n of automatic text analysis and machine learning to scan documents and identify false robbery reports in eight out of 10 cases.

Called Veripol, it was developed by researcher­s at Cardiff University and Charles III University in Madrid and is already being used by Spanish police.

The program was fed robbery reports that were known to be false so that it could learn to spot patterns.

It found that false statements tended to be shorter, lacked precise detail, and were more focused on the stolen property – rather than the whole incident.

Informatio­n about the attacker was often scant, while there was usually a lack of witnesses and other hard evidence to corroborat­e the story.

In most cases claimants had not contacted police or a doctor immediatel­y after the incident.

“Our model began to identify false statements where it was reported that incidents happened from behind or where the aggressors were wearing helmets,” said co-author of the study Dr Jose Camacho-collados, from Cardiff University’s School of Computer Science and Informatic­s.

“Similarly, other clear indicators of falsehood were descriptio­ns of the type of objects stolen. References to iphones and Samsung were associated with false claims, whereas bicycles and necklaces were correlated with true reports.”

Researcher­s hope that it will save police time and money, and deter people from filing false statements.

The system was trialled in the urban areas of Murcia and Malaga in Spain in June 2017. In one week, 25 cases of false robbery reports were detected in Murcia, resulting in the cases being closed, and a further 39 were detected and closed in Malaga.

“Police across Spain are now using Veripol, and integratin­g it into their working practices,” said Dr Camachocol­lados. “Ultimately we hope that by showing that automatic detection is possible it will deter people from lying to the police in the first instance.”

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