Abstract

This study investigates the presence of dynamical patterns of interpersonal coordination in extended deceptive conversations across multimodal channels of behavior. Using a novel "devil’s advocate" paradigm, we experimentally elicited deception and truth across topics in which conversational partners either agreed or disagreed, and where one partner was surreptitiously asked to argue an opinion opposite of what he or she really believed. We focus on interpersonal coordination as an emergent behavioral signal that captures interdependencies between conversational partners, both as the coupling of head movements over the span of milliseconds, measured via a windowed lagged cross correlation (WLCC) technique, and more global temporal dependencies across speech rate, using cross recurrence quantification analysis (CRQA). Moreover, we considered how interpersonal coordination might be shaped by strategic, adaptive conversational goals associated with deception. We found that deceptive conversations displayed more structured speech rate and higher head movement coordination, the latter with a peak in deceptive disagreement conversations. Together the results allow us to posit an adaptive account, whereby interpersonal coordination is not beholden to any single functional explanation, but can strategically adapt to diverse conversational demands.

Highlights

  • From bold-faced lies to more benign fibs, deception is interwoven in social life

  • We examine the patterns of alignment in speech rate coordination, beginning with analyses involving virtual pairs

  • The conversations across all conditions and for all cross recurrence quantification analysis (CRQA) measures displayed statistically higher levels and structure of coordination when compared to virtual controls

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Summary

Introduction

From bold-faced lies to more benign fibs, deception is interwoven in social life. The goal of deception is to convince others of sincerity while communicating information known to be false while avoiding detection. In an everyday conversational context, deceivers can hide behind communicative assumptions of cooperation, relevance, and honesty [1,2], as well as behind the complexity and rapid changes characterizing face-to-face conversation [3]. Attentional and cognitive resources are often limited, and in such complex contexts, one might argue naïve partners to be less likely to explicitly notice a duplicitous interlocutor’s incriminating behaviors.

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