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The Humintell Blog October 30, 2012

Terrifying Moments (Pictures)

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

Nightmares Fear Factory in Niagara Falls, Canada, took pictures of people at a particularly terrifying moment in their haunted house. It is unknown what exactly they’re looking at – but it’s obviously pretty scary.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Filed Under: Nonverbal Behavior

The Humintell Blog October 26, 2012

Follow up: A Mother’s Emotional Plea

In a previous blog post we asked you to analyze the nonverbal behavior of  a mother’s emotional appeal to find her missing daughter.

There were mixed comments regarding her behavior, as some said she seemed suspicious and others claimed see seemed to be telling the truth.

This mother’s real name is Coral Jones and her daughter April Jones disappeared on October 1, 2012 after being sighted willingly getting into a van near her home. A man by the name of Mark Bridger was subsequently arrested and charged with Jones’s abduction and murder.

In her emotional plea, it is difficult to see Coral’s eyebrow movement while she is speaking because of her bangs but if you look closely, as she is pleading for her daughter’s return you see genuine marks of sadness with the brows coming up and together. Her voice also cracks from the overwhelming sense of emotion. You don’t see any hot spots such as smiles or smirks. She’s telling the truth.

Take a look at the video once again:

Click here to view the embedded video.

For more practice with exercises like these, take a look at these past blog posts:

Revisiting Genuine vs Fake Emotions

Follow up to Truth Tellers and Liars

Follow up to Truth and Deception: Hone Your Skills

Filed Under: Hot Spots, Nonverbal Behavior

The Humintell Blog October 24, 2012

Workplace Illness or Illusion ?

Most of us know or hear from friends/spouses about a co-worker who is always ill or not in tip top shape during the work week; yet, they seem to chipper up for the weekends.  Why is this?  Are they just faking it?

Well, Personnel Today has delved into the controversial question:  Is it Illness or Illusion?

Many of us tend to believe that for the most part people are just faking it.  Why not; if you make it to work, then why can’t someone else?  Contrary to this popular belief, new data, based on UK agencies and statistics, indicates that only a minority of people applying for employment and support allowance claims are being deceptive.

So what constitutes “illness deception” ?  

It is described as the “general concept of ‘simulation’ covering deception, dissimulation and faking as well as that described as ‘malingering’ which refers to the conscious and deliberate invention of a physical or mental disorder, or the attribution of an existing incapacity to an accident or illness which was not actually its cause, in order to derive some personal benefit“  (Caro et al, 2005).

The main assessment for employment and support allowance claims and the fit-for-work tests, the Work Capability Assessment (WCA), is under attack for being too soft and too hard in equal measure.

A Guardian newspaper article claimed “it’s the tests that deceive, not the people claiming benefits…think of a 16th-century witchcraft trial, take away transparency and public approval, and you have it about right”.

The author of that article claimed that individuals with real issues such as serious mental health issues are tested too rigorously and people who should be tested rigorously find it way to easy to abuse the system and collect benefits unnecessarily.  As low as 8% of all cases studied in a general occupational medicine clinic setting (in the UK) exhibited behavior in keeping with illness deception.

It is important not to confuse illness deception with “factitious disorder” (previously known as Münchausen Syndrome), which is a recognized mental health disorder.

  So where do these discrepancies take place? 

According to Personnel Today, it has become common practice for occupational health to challenge GP decisions on suitability for work; and it is the employer’s prerogative which advice they take into account.  GPs are self-reported advocates of the “patient” whereas an OH professional can offer an independent review with knowledge of the workplace and opportunities for adjustments and rehabilitation.

How about YOU, do you fake it or make it?  
Just remember:  ”Showing up is half the battle” ! 

Filed Under: Nonverbal Behavior

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