
Vol.
2 Number 1 �
January 15,2003
� 2003 by Stan B. Walters
All Rights Reserved
�Categories
of Stress Behavior�
by
Stan can be
reached by email at
Stan@TheLieGuy.com .
Stan writes, teaches & speaks internationally on deception,
interview & interrogation.
Each of us experiences
stress creating events on a regularly basis and in
a large number of different settings. Everything
from the simple aggravating issues of daily life
up to and including the stress that is associated with
creating and maintaining deception. The ability of the
interviewer to be able to accurately diagnose deception
rests on his or her knowledge of which stress behaviors are
those that are associated with deception versus those
behaviors that are merely the result of �ambient stress� of
the current interview setting. Those individuals who fail
at accurately identifying deception in other people
invariably misidentify a large number of general stress
behaviors as being signs of deception while at the same time
failing to recognize reliable behavioral cues of deception.
Understanding the classification of human
stress indicators into the three basic categories
of general, incriminating
and discriminatory cues can dramatically improve the
investigative interviewer�s deception detection accuracy.
The �general � category of stress cues is the largest and
most diverse of all the three categories. These are
behaviors that each of us experiences in varying degrees
throughout our day. These cues are present when things are
absolutely crazy in the mornings as everyone in the
household scrambles to get ready for the day�s activities,
the project at work is going badly, the relationship with
another person is deteriorating, the bills are late, or one
of your children has come home early with a surprise case of
the measles and you�ve never had them! This is the type of
stress we experience when we are at the bank applying for a
loan or when we are at the restaurant and we�re worried that
your credit card may be other limit and will be declined
when we �pick up the tab.� It is these types of behaviors
that we may describe as being nothing more than the
�background� noise of human behaviors that goes on all the
time. Some of these symptoms include a louder voice along
with higher voice pitch, agitated facial expressions,
increased hand and arm behaviors and even a few speech
flaws. They are by no means signs of deception yet are
often seized upon by the eye of many untrained or
ill-informed observers as reliable signs of deception. If
these are signs of deception we all must be lying all the
time!
The �incriminating� category of stress cues tend to be more
prolific than the �lie signs� but there is nowhere as many
as those that populate the �general� stress category. These
behaviors are more likely to be seen during moments of
evasive response by a subject but will not specifically
pinpoint to moment of deception by the speaker. The
presence of these symptoms appears to be more scattered and
not always recurring when the issue is raised at a later
time by the interviewer. At the same time both truthful and
deceptive subjects are capable of generating these cues but
we find that deceptive subjects generate are far higher
number of them overall during their general response to some
form of inquiry. These can include stuttering, stammering,
mumbling speech and general pausing. These symptoms much
like the �general� category are problematic in that they are
often inappropriately given far more weight toward an end
analysis of specific deception. A more accurate analysis
from observing these behaviors would be that the subject�s
overall behavior �concerns� the interviewer therefore he or
she should spend more time with the subject and ask in-depth
questions regarding the specifics of the issue under
investigation and watch to see if the subject begins to
generate the stress signals that are capable of isolating
the stress behaviors associated with deception.
The �discriminatory� category of stress cues are those
behaviors that when observed under stringent scientific
conditions have been found to be highly reliable in marking
moments of deception. It is this category that we focus on
a great deal in Practical Kinesic Interview & Interrogation
courses. With a good understanding of the �general� and
�incriminating� stress categories, the stress behaviors
associate with deception become more obvious. The
interviewer will find this category populated with nonverbal
behaviors such as aversion, negation, contradictions, and to
some extent performance and control cues. Verbal cues
include the content category of �denial� as well as elements
seem in the presentation of an �unclear thought line� or
cognitive dissonance.
In-depth knowledge of the �incriminating� and
�discriminatory� categories along with accurate
recognition of their occurrences can dramatically
improve the observer�s ability to spot deception.
Just as critical however is to understand the
significance of the general stress behaviors.
These cues can tell the interviewer a lot about the
subject�s current emotional and cognitive state as well as
the strength of the emotion being expressed. These cues can
guide the interviewer through the entire interview and allow
him or her to maintain control over the flow of information
and improve the quality of communication. At the same time,
the interviewer must still understand that �general� stress
cues will often �populate� a deception cluster and can
indicate level of severity of stress the subject is
experiencing while perpetrating the lie.
� 2003 by Stan B. Walters All Rights Reserved