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Aldert Vrij

Researcher at University of Portsmouth

Publications -  401
Citations -  17189

Aldert Vrij is an academic researcher from University of Portsmouth. The author has contributed to research in topics: Deception & Lie detection. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 384 publications receiving 15810 citations. Previous affiliations of Aldert Vrij include University of Amsterdam.

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Verbal Deception and the Model Statement as a Lie Detection Tool.

TL;DR: This article describes why the Model Statement technique works, reports the empirical evidence that it works, and outlines how to use it, and gives suggestions for future research with the technique.
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The effect of interpreters on eliciting information, cues to deceit and rapport

TL;DR: This article examined how the presence of an interpreter during investigative interviews affects eliciting information, cues to deceit and rapport, and concluded that at present there are no benefits to using an interpreter with regard to eliciting or rapport.
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Which lie detection tools are ready for use in the criminal justice system

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce arousal-based lie detection tools (Behavior Analysis Interview, Comparison Question polygraph Test, CQT) and cognition based lie detection techniques (imposing cognitive load, encouraging interviewees to say more, asking unexpected questions, strategic use of evidence, Verifiability Approach and Concealed Information polygraph test, CIT), and discuss whether they are ready for use in investigative interviews.
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Earwitness identification performance: the effect of language, target, deliberate strategies and indirect measures

TL;DR: This paper examined whether voice identification performance is influenced by language comprehension and target presence (target-present (TP) vs. target-absent line-ups) and found that participants who reported using the elimination strategy were significantly more accurate than participants who report using either a'matching' strategy or no strategy.
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Fear of crime and mass media crime reports testing similarity hypotheses

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the effects such reporting may have on the public's perception of the media and its ability to provide the public with news on the discovery, tracking and prosecution of criminal offenses.