Psychopathy, arousal and the detection of deception

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Algoma University Archives > Algoma University Theses collection > Psychology series > Psychopathy, arousal and the detection of deception
Creator
Shelli-Jean Donofrio
Date
1993
Physical Description
1.93 MB of textual records (PDF)
General Material Designation
Electronic record, Textual record
Language(s)
English
Bibliographic Information
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.:, OSTMA-PSYC-Donofrio-Shelli-Jean-19930402
Descriptive Notes
Audience: Undergraduate. -- Dissertation: Thesis (B. A.). -- Algoma University, 1993. -- Submitted in partial fulfillment of course requirements for PSYC 4105. -- Includes questionnaires and tables. -- Contents: Thesis.
This study investigated the detection of deception in a mock-crime paradigm. Thirty-two male Algoma University students completed anxiety, psychopathy, and propensity to lie scales. One half the subjects were randomly assigned to a "guilty" condition in which they were instructed by a co-experimenter to take an envelope containing $20 from the experimenter's jacket pocket and retain it. The remaining subjects, assigned to an "innocent" condition, were instructed to remove the envelope containing $20 from the jacket pocket and hand it to the co-experimenter. The subjects were then administered a polygraph test using the Control Question Technique, wherein their physiological responses were recorded within each of the conditions, half of the subjects were instructed to respond truthfully about the money when asked on the test, and half were instructed to be deceptive. The results and their implications will be discussed.