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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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Evaluating Credibility of Witnesses – are We Instructing Jurors on Invalid Factors?

TL;DR: Aldert Vrij, Ph.D., an internationally respected expert on evaluating credibility and the European Consortium of Psychological Research on Deception Detection as mentioned in this paper presented an educational lecture program concerning the fallacy of considering nonverbal behavior to evaluate credibility at the 2016 Pennsylvania Conference of State Trial Judges.
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The existence of a black clothing stereotype: the impact of a victim' black clothing on impression formation

TL;DR: The authors examined the existence of a black clothing stereotype in victims reports concerning sexual harrassment and found that this stereotype existed in all groups and not only in subgroups, and the practical implications of the findings are discussed.
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High speed driving:police use of lethal force during simulated incidents

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of high speed driving and field independence on police officers'physiological arousal, emotion and shooting behavior were investigated within two operationally realistic simulated firearms environments, and the results revealed that driving at high speed did indeed increase officers' objective and subjective feelings of arousal, feelings of irritation towards the suspect, and reduced officers self-rated willingness to shoot the suspect.
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The influence of social pressure and black clothing on crime judgements

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of social pressure and color of clothing on participants' crime judgements was examined, and it was found that participants gave numerous incorrect answers, with the most incorrect answers being given when there were four confederates, and the confederate wore dark clothing.
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Complications travel: A cross‐cultural comparison of the proportion of complications as a verbal cue to deceit

TL;DR: In this article, a cross-cultural comparison of the proportion of complications as a verbal cue to deceit is presented, which was shown to be more diagnostic than total details in two British samples and in three samples that each included Hispanic, Russian, and South Korean participants.