Cyn-7 assgn
Running Head: Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
Jamiah Riddick
Walden University
FPSY - 6393; MS Psychology Capstone
Dr. Jackson
March 28th, 2021
Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
Literature Review Matrix Template
References (complete APA format): Peer-reviewed?
Yes or No What are the main ideas or themes from
this article? How do these main themes relate to
your Capstone problem?
1. Balbuzanov. Ivan (2019). Lies and consequences: The effect of lie detection on communication outcomes. International Journal of Game Theory. ttps://eds-a-ebscohost- com.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/eds/detail
Yes The article focuses on communication strategy along with informed senders and a receiver informed along with aligned partial preferences. This strategy focuses on the ability to detect lies by the sender.
The results from this study identify stochastic reviews for receivers revealing lie-detection equilibrium.
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Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
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2. Vrij, A., Leal, S., & Fisher, R. P. (2018). Verbal deception and the model statement as a lie detection tool. Frontiers in psychiatry, 9, 492.
Yes The article introduces techniques in lie detection by describing why the strategy works while reviewing empirical evidence that the technique works and outlining its application.
The article introduces a technique following the model statement that developed methods in lie detection.
3. Monaro, M., Galante, C., Spolaor, R., Li, Q. Q., Gamberini, L., Conti, M., & Sartori, G. (2018). Covert lie detection using keyboard dynamics. Scientific reports, 8(1), 1-10.
Yes The authors in the article focus on identifying subjects without external verifications such as fingerprints or DNA in an unsolved manner.
The article's issue of individual lies as it aims to verify fake information identified following dynamics specific to keystroke response. Keystroke is used to distinguish liars from individuals talking the truth.
4. Vrij, A. (2018). Verbal lie detection tools from an applied perspective. In Detecting concealed information and deception (pp. 297-327). Academic Press.
No The article introduces techniques in detecting lies verbally. These include RM, SCAN, SVA, CCA VA, and SUE.
The validity of these techniques can solve the issue of verbal lies.
5. Vrij, A., Fisher, R. P., & Blank, H. (2017). A cognitive approach to lie detection: A meta‐analysis. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 22(1), 1-21.
Yes The authors provide an analysis meta- analysis involving a new cognitive approach to the detection of non-verbal lies. The approach comprises of three strategies; encourage the interviewees to
The cognitive approach to the detection of lies comprised of results accurate in the detection of truth as compared to the traditional approaches.
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Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
become open, asking questions unexpectedly, and imposing a cognitive load.
6. Sai, L., Wu, H., Hu, X., & Fu, G. (2018). Telling the truth to deceive: examining executive control and reward-related processes underlying interpersonal deception. Brain and cognition, 125, 149-156.
No The article examines reward-related and executive control processes that underlie deception interpersonally. After experiments, deception feedbacks resulted in greater positivity in reward compared to honest feedback.
The article determines whether truthful opinions or false statements modulate their reward or executive control processes.
7. Fu, H., Qiu, W., Ma, H., & Ma, Q. (2017). Neurocognitive mechanisms underlying deceptive hazard evaluation: an event-related potentials investigation. PloS one, 12(8), e0182892.
Yes Deceptive acts are common among humans during interactions socially. The authors applied the event-related practices in understanding how neutral correlates with participant’s deception.
The article showed that honesty interactions between deceptive/truthful with accuracy on safety.
8. Anderson, D., Stephenson, M., Togelius, J., Salge, C., Levine, J., & Renz, J. (2018, April). Deceptive games. In International Conference on the Applications of Evolutionary Computation (pp. 376-391). Springer, Cham.
Yes The article outlines deception existing in games where the structure of reward involves game aspects that are designed in leading agents from optimal policies. The games covered a certain deception type that is classified according to artificial frameworks on intelligence.
This suggests the understanding of deception along with capabilities of the algorithm in games that characterize deception.
9. De Gaspari, F., Jajodia, S., Mancini, L. V., & Pagnotta, G. (2019). Towards intelligent cyber deception systems. In Autonomous Cyber Deception (pp. 21-33). Springer,
No This article deals sophistication increase in cyber-attacks nature that decreases expert effectiveness in human intervention from the response time.
This relates to the coursework as it presents prototypes concerning a framework designed to simplify the development of tools to prevent
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Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
Cham. deception. 10. Markowitz, D. M. (2020). The deception faucet: A metaphor to conceptualize deception and its detection. New Ideas in Psychology, 59, 100816.
No The authors seek to understand the reasons for minimal cues for the deception that is reliable and the challenges associated with it. The article highlights the theories existing by suggesting the production discourse in deceptive production.
The article highlights the basic components of deception as goals, deceptive expectations, and truth-lie base rates.
11. Levitan, S. I. (2019). Deception in spoken dialogue: Classification and individual differences (Doctoral dissertation, Columbia University).
Yes Detection of automatic deception is a significant problem that touches implications that are far-reaching involving social services, politics, and intelligence agencies.
Challenges associated with designing methods for solving challenges associated with deception revolve around acquiring the truth incentives.
12. Vidanagama, D. U., Silva, T. P., & Karunananda, A. S. (2020). Deceptive consumer review detection: a survey. Artificial Intelligence Review, 53(2), 1323-1352.
Yes Various consumers often rely on true reviews that offer credible opinions in mining consumers in response to a specific product. This attracts fraudsters who might generate reviews that are deceptive in manipulating consumer’s decisions in harmful and persistent issues.
The article provides an analysis in- depth of current research that detects reviews that are deceptive while identifying bottlenecks and strengths in the improvement of deception methodologies.
13. Nahari, G., Ashkenazi, T., Fisher, R. P., Granhag, P. A., Hershkowitz, I., Masip, J., ... & Vrij, A. (2019). ‘Language of lies’: Urgent issues and prospects in verbal lie detection research. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 24(1), 1-23.
Yes The article proposes various solutions to promote verbal lies detection by using workshops that promote urgent solutions to problems concerning deception.
The article offers various solutions to methods that can be applied to enhance the detection of lies in various fields, such as forensic psychology.
14.
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Critical Review and Organization of Scholarly Resources
15.
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