You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Watching "Lie to Me" Decreases the Ability to Distinguish Between Truth and Lies

in #psychology6 years ago

Upvoted on behalf of the dropahead Curation Team!

Thanks for following the rules.

DISCLAIMER: dropahead Curation Team does not necessarily share opinions expressed in this article, but find author's effort and/or contribution deserves better reward and visibility.

Help us giving you bigger upvotes by:

Upvote this comment!
Upvote the latest dropahead Daily Report!
Join the dropahead Curation Trail
to maximize your curation rewards!
Vote dropahead Witness with SteemConnect
Proxy vote dropahead Witness
with SteemConnect
Donate STEEM POWER to @dropahead
12.5SP, 25SP, 50SP, 100SP, 250SP, 500SP, 1000SP
Do the above and we'll have more STEEM POWER to give YOU bigger rewards next time!

News from dropahead: How to give back to the dropahead Project in 15 seconds or less

Sort:  

You have collected your daily Power Up! This post received an upvote worth of 1.76$.
Learn how to Power Up Smart here!

I studied non-verbal communication in college, have a psych minor, have worked in psych for many years and in life. The show depends on research and I would think they have an expert on hand when writing the show.

The one show I saw where the main guy couldn't get a read on a female judge and then it was decided to be impossible due to the judge having had botox injections in her forehead. Do you mean to tell me an expert, couldn't read anything else on the judge? I stopped watching after that.

It reminds me of the hospital shows...that stuff just doesn't happen like that. Make a show about the medication errors of doctors and nurses and you've got a likely scenario as no scene; no matter how ridiculous, dangerous or unbelievable has happened somewhere before.