Liespotting
Proven Techniques to Detect Deception
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Narrated by:
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Karen Saltus
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By:
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Pamela Meyer
About this listen
People - friends, family members, work colleagues, salespeople - lie to us all the time. Daily, hourly, constantly. None of us is immune, and all of us are victims. According to studies by several different researchers, most of us encounter nearly 200 lies a day. Now there’s something we can do about it. Liespotting links three disciplines - facial recognition training, interrogation training, and a comprehensive survey of research in the field - into a specialized body of information developed specifically to help business leaders detect deception and get the information they need to successfully conduct their most important interactions and transactions.
Some of the nation's leading business executives have learned to use these methods to root out lies in high stakes situations. Liespotting for the first time brings years of knowledge - previously found only in the intelligence community, police training academies, and universities - into the corporate boardroom, the manager's meeting, the job interview, the legal proceeding, and the deal negotiation.
©2010 Pamela Meyer (P)2012 Gildan Media, LLCWhat listeners say about Liespotting
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Sadbassa
- 06-02-23
Very disappointing
Purporting to offer ‘proven techniques for spotting deception’ the book starts well covering some detail of said techniques, until about 1/3rd of the way through where it disappears down a rabbit hole of theoretical corporate business scenarios that discuss what may happen and goes little further. The audiobook is summed up about ten minutes before the end when it states “understanding lie spotting will greatly help you identifying lies” forgetting that the description and detail of the actual techniques haven’t been covered. You are always waiting for the meat on the skeletal bones of the book and they never come. On balance not worth it!
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- Joe Public
- 07-09-15
A lot of faffing, not enough data
Overall good information, but half of the book can be skipped. Especially first 2 or 3 chapters - these can be summarised as "Your life will be wonderful if you'll be able to spot a lie". Also last 2 chapters are not really relevant.
And the real information is getting lost in the noise of "how good it would be". I wish the book was shortened like in half, but without the noise.
I'm keen to re-listen the book as the good part of the materials are not easy to settle in and need a revision, but I'm hesitant because it is so full of noise as well.
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- Wonky Donkey
- 02-02-13
Deceptive Title
The general concepts of dissembling are covered but half the book is padding which is both irritating and patronising. If you want to understand the subject start with Paul Ekman's work, this title adds little or nothing to his established work.
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Overall
- Mark Vickers
- 26-06-19
Very disappointing
Not what I expected, not much science gone into the content. Too many experience stories, doesn't really give you the basics to spot a liar, seems more of a hunch or gut feeling might be the next topic for the author. I thought it was mainly aimed at business negotiations which they also point out backed up by investigative work to reach a conclusion.
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- Jan Anton Fjermestad
- 11-12-19
Highly wasted time
The book spends an inordinate amount of time and words on conveying very little information. I am insignificantly better at spotting liars after this book.
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1 person found this helpful