The folks at Bronx-based dancewear manufacturer KD New York are upset that they weren’t credited in Elle’s Beyoncé cover story.
According to Page Six, the singer wore the company’s
leggings in the spread, but the online version of the article only credits Ivy
Park, Beyoncé’s own line with Topshop.
Spotting a lie isn't as quick and easy as it looks on
television.
With time and training, it is possible to get a good sense
of when someone is deceiving you, experts say.
Now experts have revealed the giveaways you can use to spot
liars.
'It's really about how to observe very carefully,' said
Pamela Meyer, author of the book 'Liespotting' and chief executive officer of
the private firm Calibrate, which trains people and companies about how to spot
deception.
'It's really not a parlor trick.'
It's a skill that can be developed with practice, said David
Matsumoto, a San Francisco State University professor of psychology.
He's also a consultant to law enforcement and intelligence
agencies and chief executive officer of Humintell, a company that trains police
agencies, lawyers and businesses in how to read emotions.
There is no magic tell or giveaway, Meyer and Matsumoto
said.
There are hints — or 'leakage,' as Meyer calls it — but they
aren't the same for everyone.
What experts look for is change from truth-telling to
deception, but not one specific change. So they need a baseline, a sense of
what people look and talk like when their guard is down and they are telling
the truth.
While it is possible to get a baseline with 20 seconds to 30
seconds of observation, it works better with more time. Different people have
different baselines. Some people can act nervous — especially when being
questioned by police — even if they are telling the truth.
Once a normal is established, the idea is to ask open-ended
questions and look for cues, changes in verbal and nonverbal behavior, Meyer
said.
I read this from UK Daily Mail and decided to share.
No comments:
Post a Comment