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Michael Floyd is a veteran author, editor, and XML developer who has been involved with XSLT since its inception. He provides XML training through BeyondHTML.com and edits the XML.org newsletter

Works by Michael Floyd

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23 reviews
Six-word review: Experts reveal how they expose lies.

Extended review:

• Cultivate the ability to look and listen at the same time.

• Watch for clusters of deceptive behaviors and not just single instances.

• Learn to ignore truthful behavior.

• Be alert to nonanswers and avoidance of response to direct questions.

• Notice stalling tactics.

• Recognize attacks on the questioner for what they are.

These are but a sampling of techniques that the authors have incorporated into the model show more they teach in investigative settings from law enforcement to corporate security. The authors explain why each aspect of the model is used and how to apply it. The model is not intended to prove that the person being questioned is lying, but it sure does point to people and topics that warrant further attention.

This book is a fast, easy read that I found remarkably educational. In fact, I'd consider it worth a second read, since once I know what's coming I think I may find it easier to absorb and retain information the second time around.

I'm not involved in any kind of investigative activity and rarely have the need to question anyone in a situation where deception is a concern. Yet I found my awareness of deceptive behavior multiplied by some significant amount. As it happened, I finished the book yesterday, and today on NPR I heard a segment of an IRS official's hearing before the Senate in the matter of targeting conservative groups seeking tax exemptions. I almost laughed out loud to hear this person giving responses and evasions that could have come straight out of this book.

Interestingly, the authors anticipate and answer the charge that knowledge of their techniques will teach people to become better liars. The behaviors they've learned to spot, they say, operate on an unconscious and involuntary level and are very difficult to suppress, especially because the level of concentration that would take is pretty hard to sustain while you're also preoccupied with perpetrating plausible falsehoods. Even if you could manage some of them, others would give you away.

Remember, they don't regard any of the telltale signs as proof of deception but only as an indicator of where more attention is needed.

Even if all I've learned is how to hear politicians differently, I'll consider this a worthwhile read.
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This is an interesting book that provides some very clear instructions for determining whether or not someone is telling the truth. The book was put together using the knowledge of three CIA personnel who have been involved in interrogations and in training interrogators over many years. These former CIA employees are now selling their training to various agencies, including the CIA.

It would be easy to dismiss this book as a marketing gimmick, but it does contain useful information on the show more subject and is an easy read. For quick reference purposes some of the key points are summarised in the margins of the book.

Other useful content is the debunking of received knowledge about how to tell if someone is lying, e.g. eye-contact, touching the face, etc. These are not totally dismissed, but they are demonstrated not to be fool-proof indicators and that they cannot be taken in isolation.

One interesting aspect of the book is the wording used when the indicators indicate an untruth: the phrase used throughout this book is "that subject warrants further attention". I interpret this as their defence against law suits for over promising. Had they said "this indicates the subject is lying" they could leave themselves open to legal challenge in some situations.

All-in-all a worthwhile read and I will be using it as a reference book.
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½
This is an incredible read that goes so far beyond pop culture myths on reading lies and liars. I'd recommend it to anyone who enjoys reading human behavior. While geared at people with some investigative professional career (and with the warning of don't practice these techniques on your significant other) it's also useful for anyone who manages others, negotiates, works with people who stretch the truth, or even works with one coworker who lies constantly. There's also an appendix with show more sections of useful questions for specific applications such as parents of teenagers.
I'd also highly recommend this for current or aspiring white-hat social engineers. Reading this along with the book "Unmasking the Social Engineer" [disclaimer - I work for the publisher of that book] would give you a good set of techniques to practice all levels of detecting deception in others and also how to avoid setting off someone else's deception detection triggers in your own work. While the authors of "Spy the Lie" caution against the work related to facial micro-expressions explored in "Unmasking the Social Engineer" I'm convinced that with sufficient practice the techniques advocated in both books are useful.
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I bought this book for two reasons:

1) As an author whose primary characters often belong to some form of law enforcement organization, I thought this book might be a good reference in terms of writing more realistic investigative processes

2) I personally have always been fascinated by anything involving human behavior and like to learn new ways to read people.

This book was an interesting read; it used real-world examples and the authors’ own experiences to teach concepts, and there was show more just enough wit and dry humor to really keep me engaged.

The only thing that bothered me was that some of the “deceptive behaviors” are things that I – someone with a fairly high degree of social anxiety – do on a regular basis if I’m nervous while interacting with people. I didn’t kill anyone, I swear!

All in all, it was a great read. The authors use plain language that makes somewhat tricky material easy for anyone to understand, and the concepts we learn can be applied to any aspect of life.
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Works
10
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Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
21
ISBNs
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