In chapter 8 of What Every Body Is Saying, Joe Navarro cautions readers that detecting deception is far more difficult than most people assume, and he urges a careful, disciplined approach grounded in behavioral science rather than intuition or myth.
The Hard Truth About Lie Detection
Navarro begins by dismantling the popular belief that trained professionals can easily spot lies. Drawing from decades of law enforcement and counterintelligence experience, he explains that most people—including judges, police officers, and investigators—perform only slightly better than chance when attempting to detect deception.
He emphasizes:
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There is no single behavior that proves someone is lying.
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Many so-called “tells” are simply signs of stress.
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Even tools like the polygraph are far from infallible.
Mistaking stress for deception has led to wrongful accusations and false confessions. Therefore, the goal is not to “catch liars” instantly, but to read behavior carefully and contextually.
Why Deception Is So Difficult to Detect
Navarro explains several reasons deception is hard to uncover:
1. Humans Practice Lying Early
Lying develops in childhood and becomes a social survival tool. People lie to avoid punishment, protect feelings, or gain advantage. With repetition comes skill.
2. Stress ≠ Deception
The same limbic responses—sweating, trembling, fidgeting—occur whether a person is lying or simply nervous.
3. No “Pinocchio Effect”
There is no universal, automatic signal that reveals dishonesty.
Because of these realities, deception must be approached probabilistically, not absolutely.
A New Framework: The Comfort/Discomfort Model
Navarro introduces a model he developed for the FBI based on observing comfort versus discomfort.
The premise:
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Truthful people tend to appear more comfortable.
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Deceptive or guilty individuals often experience internal distress, which can leak out behaviorally.
However, discomfort alone does not equal deception—it signals that something is emotionally significant.
Establishing Comfort and Baseline
Before assessing honesty, Navarro advises establishing rapport and observing baseline behavior.
Creating a Comfort Zone
The interviewer must:
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Remain neutral
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Avoid accusatory tone
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Respect personal space
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Ask clarifying rather than confrontational questions
Suspicion alters behavior. A hostile approach increases stress in both honest and dishonest individuals, contaminating observations.
Signs of Comfort
Comforted individuals typically display:
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Open body posture
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Unblocked torsos (ventral exposure)
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Natural gestures
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Mirroring (isopraxism)
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Behavioral synchrony
Synchrony is key. When two people are comfortable, their posture, tone, and movements subtly align.
Signs of Discomfort
Discomfort activates the limbic system and may produce:
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Increased perspiration
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Faster breathing
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Fidgeting or foot withdrawal
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Leaning away
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Creating physical barriers
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Neck touching or face rubbing
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Eye blocking
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Voice cracking or hard swallowing
Navarro warns: these behaviors indicate stress—not necessarily lying.
Pacifying Behaviors: Valuable but Limited
Pacifiers (self-soothing behaviors) help regulate internal stress. Examples include:
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Touching the neck
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Rubbing hands
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Ventilating shirt collar
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Stroking hair
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Nose touching
Navarro recommends:
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Get a full view of the person.
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Expect some nervousness initially.
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Establish a baseline.
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Watch for spikes in pacifiers after specific questions.
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Ask, pause, and observe.
Pacifiers are useful for identifying which topics trigger discomfort, not for declaring someone deceptive.
Synchrony: Alignment Between Words and Behavior
Synchrony refers to congruence between:
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Words and head movement
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Emotion and event
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Timeline and reported facts
Examples of asynchrony:
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Saying “no” while subtly nodding yes
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Delayed head movements after verbal statements
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Emotional flatness when describing traumatic events
Incongruence raises suspicion—but still requires corroboration.
Emphasis: A Powerful Indicator
Honest people naturally emphasize emotionally meaningful statements using:
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Hand gestures
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Eyebrow raises
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Leaning forward
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Gravity-defying movements
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Vocal intensity
Liars often:
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Reduce movement
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Show delayed emphasis
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Speak with limited gesture
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Display controlled, restrained posture
Navarro observes that deception often lacks emotional conviction. The cognitive brain fabricates the story, but the limbic system does not fully support it.
The Rogatory (Palm-Up) Position
When someone makes a strong denial with palms up, it can signal supplication rather than confidence. Assertive, truthful declarations are more often delivered with palms down.
Palm-up gestures may suggest the person is asking to be believed rather than confidently stating a fact.
Territorial Behavior and Posture
Confidence expands the body; insecurity contracts it.
Possible discomfort cues include:
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Stooping
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Folding arms tightly
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Locked ankles
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“Turtle effect” (shoulders raised, head lowered)
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Gripping chair armrests rigidly
Modified shoulder shrugs—especially uneven or incomplete ones—can reflect lack of commitment to a statement.
Common Misconceptions About Eye Contact
Navarro rejects the myth that avoiding eye contact signals lying.
In fact:
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Many deceptive individuals increase eye contact deliberately.
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Cultural norms affect gaze behavior.
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Eye blocking is more meaningful than gaze aversion.
Again, context and clusters matter more than isolated cues.
Two Critical Behavioral Patterns
Navarro highlights two major patterns for evaluating potential deception:
1. Lack of Synchrony
Mismatch between verbal and nonverbal signals.
2. Lack of Emphasis
Reduced or unnatural emphasis during important statements.
Neither proves deception, but both warrant further inquiry.
Final Caution
Navarro concludes with a strong warning:
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There is no definitive behavioral sign of lying.
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Even experts are frequently wrong.
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Observations must be contextual, corroborated, and cautious.
The purpose of studying nonverbal behavior is not to label people as liars, but to:
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Identify areas of discomfort
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Ask better questions
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Seek verification
Deception detection is about disciplined observation, not intuition. At best, nonverbal behavior provides direction—not certainty.
