Thursday, February 10, 2011

Crocodile tears don’t work: Study shows how to spot a fake apology

Canadian scientists have discovered that there are ways to tell the difference between people who are sincerely remorseful and those who are just faking it -- but you have to be able to watch them while they’re saying they’re sorry.

The researchers, led by Leanne ten Brinke of the University of British Columbia, rounded up 31 college students who were videotaped while making sincere or insincere apologies, according to a new study published in the journal Law and Human Behavior.

The study volunteers were first asked to describe, while being videotaped, a non-criminal event that they felt intensely and genuinely remorseful about. They were then asked to describe an episode of cheating for which they felt no remorse, but to act as if they did.

When researchers compared the two sets of recordings, they saw major differences between the people who were truly sorry and those who were just faking it.”                           Read the rest here.

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Trump's Lowest Grift Ever Saved for Holy Week

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