With the advent of since, people now have the power to know if someone is lying to them. Let’s face it, people lie. But people also give off signals when they lie, signals that you can hear in their face, in their voice, and in their way of thinking. Here are some ways you can use to tell if someone is lying to you.

Know if someone is lying to you by noticing emotions and interactions.

When it comes to emotions, liars go to great lengths to pass them off as real, and it shows (and not in a good way). When a person becomes a liar, they suddenly become very self-aware. Because of this, the timing between a gesture and its corresponding emotion is off, or sometimes the gesture and the emotion seem to be at odds. The expression is usually confined to the mouth, such as a wrinkle-free smile near the eyes.

When a liar is accused, he becomes defensive, unlike an innocent person (“How dare you accuse me of…”). In general, the liar will retreat, bring his body up, as if he were preparing for an attack. He will refrain from touching and will look away from the accuser of him. Most likely, he will place an object between himself and the accuser (a coffee cup, a screen, a window, a ladder… etc.)

Know if someone is lying to you by listening

Liars speak their own language. Most politicians are fluent. When speaking this language, they do not use contractions and will use your words instead of their own. Don’t expect a straight answer, they will usually state their beliefs on the subject, hoping that will convince you, rather than just giving a simple answer. The pitch/volume of your voice will be louder or inconsistent. The sentences sound confusing.

When liars talk, they seek reassurance, so pay attention to the rises in tone at the end of the sentence (as if asking a question) and the words “right?”, “huh,” “huh” at the end of the sentence. declaration

Find out if someone is lying to you by profiling

The main mission of a liar when accused is to appear innocent, not necessarily to convince. Liars won’t give you a third-person account of an event (“And then Steve said, ‘I just saw him in the elevator’…”). Liars want to show that all is well, so they will typically leave out the negative aspects of a story, while truth-tellers typically include all the notable events, both positive and negative. Liars also forget that an honest person in an exchange between himself and the accuser includes questions from both sides of the conversation. Liars will defend themselves against questions, but they will never ask any of their own.