At first, he developed a neural predictor aimed at determining whether someone was lying. It appeared to succeed. Yet in a follow-up experiment, he and his team applied that neural lie detector to people who were telling truthful statements that served their own interests. That complicated things: “And then we show that brain decoder, that lie detector that we thought we had, can also predict when somebody’s just being selfish,” he said.
In the experiment’s final phase, the researchers attempted to remove the neural activity tied to selfishness to distinguish it from the signals associated with lying. They were able to do so. Lee noted that later they may discover the leftover signal labeled “lying” is still mixed with other mental states, such as arousal. After identifying and cutting away all such entanglements, he argued, what remains should be pure lying—at least in theory. “It could also be an empirical result that if we take enough of these compounded processes away, deception disintegrates,” he said. In other words, there might not be a single, pure lying state; perhaps lying is merely the sum of many components.
Researchers like Lee might be edging closer to a more accurate lie detector, improving on the conventional polygraph. But there’s no miraculous fix right now. And, as Lee’s findings imply, the issue may be ontological rather than technological.
That’s Maschke’s firm position. “It’s all pseudoscience,” he said. “There is no lie detector. So my thinking is that it’s better not to pretend that you can detect lies, because it’s a way of deceiving yourself.”
Maybe it’s true that no one can be certain if another person is lying. After all, people are famously individuals. “Everybody’s so different in how they tell their lie,” Denkinger said. And, apparently, in how they tell their truths.
This piece first appeared on Undark. Read the original article.













