Social Engineering Blogs

An Aggregator for Blogs About Social Engineering and Related Fields

The Humintell Blog September 24, 2013

Teaching Lies in Order to Spot Them

Stan Walters, an interview and interrogation expert, is back in our blog with information on the untruths in deception detection courses.

In the video below, he discusses the various ways in which certain courses being taught on deception detection are full of lies themselves.  He focuses on one particular course and goes through the various ways in how their information is not only misguided but false.

His advice:  “Look for empirical evidence…[and] Look at what is [actually] being taught..“

Remember the importance of knowing  exactly where your getting your information from and make sure that it’s credible.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Have you seen impostors out there, and if so what kind of information were they trying to pass off as credible?

Filed Under: General, Hot Spots, Nonverbal Behavior

The Humintell Blog September 16, 2013

Genuine Sadness or Posed Grief?

A jury found Andrea Sneiderman guilty August 19th of nine out of 13 charges in connection with her husband’s 2010 murder. Before the judge sentenced her, she tearfully asked him for leniency for the sake of her children.

Watch the video below. Do you think she displays genuine sadness or is posing her grief? Do you think she is being deceptive? Why or why not?

Click here to view the embedded video.

For more practice on detecting genuine vs fake emotions, take a look at this past blog post

Filed Under: Hot Spots

The Humintell Blog July 13, 2013

Mapping Emotions

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Courtesy of StockVault

Emotions seem to play a role in most aspects of human interaction and life, yet scientists and philosophers still know relatively little about them.  New information on emotions is continuously evolving and Science Codex has reported on one of the newest theories on the science of Emotions.

This new theory, “the integrated embodiment theory of emotions”, is outlined in the journal of Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.  It posits that emotions are formulated by the integration of different bodily perceptions that have representations of external objects, events, or states of affairs.  That is, emotions are not just representations of perception or thought but are separate mental states, which are a reflection of the integration of feelings of bodily processes and cognitive events.

Prof. Dr. Albert Newen and Dr. Luca Barlassina of the Institute of Philosophy II at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum, are the creators of this new emotion theory and purport that their theory gives a unified and principled account of the relation between emotions and bodily perceptions, the intentionality of emotions, and emotion phenomenology.

This theory labeled an impure somatic theory of emotions and is contrasted with current pure somatic theories that posit emotions are entirely constituted by bodily perceptions.  Emotions are nothing but the perception of a bodily state.  That is we do not tremble because we are scared, but rather we are scared because we tremble.  “This theory does not, however, consider the cognitive content of many emotions“, says  Newen.

The “cognitive theory of emotions” says that emotions are essentially an assessment of the situation based on reason: this dog is dangerous because he is baring his teeth. “This theory is also unsatisfactory,” says Newen, “because it forgets the feelings as a central component of the emotion.“ For example, a person can judge that a dog is dangerous and at the same time have no fear because he is an expert in handling dangerous dogs. So the cognitive assessment does not necessarily determine the emotion.

According to Newen and Barlassina, the new theory is superior to Jesse Prinz’s most sophisticated theory of emotions so far, because this does not take into account that an emotion can also be directed at an object that is not present or does not even exist.

A related article from Science World Report purports that scientists may be able to tell exactly how a person feels by mapping their brain. For the first time, researchers have identified exactly which emotion a person is experiencing based solely on brain activity.

This study, published in PLOS One journal, claims to be different from others in that it does not rely on people to delineate their emotional state(s) (i.e. self-report).  It uses a computational model that identifies individuals’ thoughts of concrete objects.

Amanda Markey , one of the researchers, points out, “Despite manifest differences between people’s psychology, different people tend to neutrally encode emotions in remarkably similar ways.“

The researchers also found that emotion signatures aren’t necessarily limited to specific brain regions. Instead, they produce characteristics patterns throughout a number of brain regions.  In the future, the researchers plan to use this new identification method in order to overcome a number of challenging problems in emotion research, including identifying emotions that individuals are actively trying to suppress.

 Is this new theory of emotions being separate mental states superior to the old?

Filed Under: Hot Spots, Nonverbal Behavior, Science

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