Wow, you base your assessment on incorrect evidence and when that is pointed out you come out with.....
You're sounding a little like the 9/11 "skeptics" there.
Well let's examine that claim.
Because lie detector tests have been discredited, you dismiss the health care professions' skill in assessing certain behaviors that need to be assessed in patient interviews. Because Quirkology tests a few untrained people who fail to detect lies, you treat that as if it were as extensive as the Framingham study or a Cochrane review. Because someone posts a single anecdote about a medical professional who made a bad call, that is now credible evidence that incriminates the entire medical profession. As if all providers have the same skills.
Here's
the typical discrediting arguments:
decades of research indicate that there are few reliable, nonverbal cues of deception. And when you think about, this makes sense. Most lying occurs with little effort, thought or planning. Lying comes very naturally and, for the most part, people are good at it. In fact, people tell the same lies so often that they even begin to believe their own lies. So, while we think that lying is difficult and stressful, this is not typically the case. It is very common for people to lie with little anxiety or nervousness.
And ironically sometimes telling the truth can be very stressful. In other words, not only is it possible for people to look "calm" when lying, but people often look "deceptive" when telling the truth.
Taking this into consideration, it should come as no surprise that every study shows that people are very poor lie detectors. Even trained professionals have a difficult time detecting deception. Only a few people can detect deception better than the odds of flipping a coin.
So in one breath they claim there are no reliable deception indicators while in the second they note some people actually are better than chance at detecting deceit. Well which is it? Are there no cues and the people who are good at it psychic? Or are they good at it because they actually are looking at reliable cues?
Here's
another typical argument discrediting the skill:
The conclusions from this research are obvious -- trained professionals and untrained laypeople, in general, cannot tell when a person is lying. If you've known someone for years (a best friend, a family member, a significant other), your chances for detecting truthfulness is likely higher (since you have become accustomed to the signs of lying in the other person over the years). Strangers, however, trying to guess truthfulness in other strangers will do no better than chance in their accuracy.
In this article the author reviews a few studies of professionals who either think they are good at lie detecting or who should be good at it, and the research results find the opposite. But then the reviewer also noted:
Wallace then goes on to explain that indeed, there are some people who can reliably detect deceit in others, and most successful poker players are usually such people. But most people are not professional, successful poker players.
So are these poker players reading minds, or are there actually cues there which reveal deceit? If there are no real cues how do you explain what the poker players are reading?
It is not about looking down, or looking suspicious or avoiding eye contact. But there is one reliable cue and that has been described as a
"micro expression" by Frank and Ekman who've researched and written about the using these brief emotional slips which don't match the circumstances of the conversation when most people are being deceitful.
You cannot use this technique for every type of deception and some people are better liars than others, so every deception cannot be reliably read. But when a person is being deceitful about something
as significant as the death of a child, they are more likely to reveal the emotion they are trying to be deceitful about.
Now if you have some studies which discredit Ekman, I'd be interested, however, he's demonstrated his skill and technique many times in public interviews.
As for the evidence I've supposedly not addressed, you can find
extensive arguments about the case to support both guilt and innocence so no single piece of evidence convicts or exonerates the Ramseys. It's the totality of the evidence I've drawn my conclusion on. I don't expect anyone else to take my word for it or draw the same conclusion. But my opinion in this case is not baseless regardless of other people coming to other conclusions.