This place also offers golden karak tea for Dh150 and if you want to buy gold-infused water, get ready to shell out Dh300
food7 hours ago
It may be easier to determine the truthfulness of a woman wearing a headscarf or even a veil when testifying, contrary to the opinions of some courts which believe that it is necessary to see a person's face to detect deception, a new study has claimed.
"The presence of a veil may compel observers to pay attention to more 'diagnostic' cues, such as listening for verbal indicators of deception," said Amy-May Leach from University of Ontario Institute of Technology in Canada.
Judges in the US, the UK and Canada have ruled that witnesses may not wear the niqab when testifying, in part because they believe that it is necessary to see a person's face to detect deception, researchers said.
For the study, believed to be the first to look into the effects of garments on lie detection, researchers conducted two experiments with a total of 523 participants.
Read: Bulgaria set to ban niqabs, burqas under new law
They examined participants' lie detection accuracy, response biases and decision strategies when evaluating the testimony of eyewitnesses in three veiling conditions: women wearing a niqab, which covers everything but the eyes; women wearing a hijab, which covers only the head and neck; and those wearing no veil.
"We hypothesised that lie detection accuracy would be higher in the niqab condition than in the hijab or no-veil conditions because it would minimise the availability of misleading cues to deception," said Leach.
"It was only when witnesses wore veils (hijabs/niqabs) that observers performed above chance levels. Thus, veiling actually improved lie detection," she said.
In the first experiment, 232 students at a university in Canada were divided into groups. In one, 80 female "witnesses" were shown a video of a woman watching a stranger's bag.
Half the witnesses saw the woman steal something from the bag. All the witnesses were told the woman was accused of theft and that they were being called upon to testify about what they saw.
France upholds headscarf firing as court mulls burqa ban
All were instructed to say the woman stole nothing - meaning half would be lying. Then they were randomly assigned to wear a niqab, a hijab or no veil. All wore black shawls over their clothing.
The witnesses were interviewed by trained experimenters and videotaped. Researchers then selected 10 videos of liars and 10 videos of truth-tellers in each veiling condition. The other participants watched the videos and indicated whether the women were lying or not.
Participants' judgements were more accurate when they watched the women in the niqabs and hijabs than when they watched those who were not veiled, researchers said.
French court imposes first niqab fines
The second experiment was similar to the first but, in addition to Canada, it was also conducted in the Netherlands and the UK, they said.
"Observers were more accurate at detecting deception in witnesses who wore niqabs or hijabs than those who did not veil," researchers said.
The findings were published in the journal Law and Human Behaviour.
This place also offers golden karak tea for Dh150 and if you want to buy gold-infused water, get ready to shell out Dh300
food7 hours ago
This travel-related case was associated with an ongoing outbreak of clade I mpox in central and eastern Africa, said the Public Health Agency of Canada
world7 hours ago
The night market is located near major hotels in Deira, and visitors can also enjoy free entertainment from different Filipino singers and comedians
uae7 hours ago
HRE Development also unveils Skyhills Residences 3
business7 hours ago
He was recently celebrated at the Better World Fund during the Venice Film Festival
lifestyle7 hours ago
This is a performance you won’t want to miss
lifestyle7 hours ago
Zvi Kogan was reported missing by his family since Thursday, November 21
uae8 hours ago
Organizations in the UAE have an urgent need for robust cybersecurity solutions, expert says
tech8 hours ago