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- Statement_analysis abstract "Statement analysis, also called investigative discourse analysis, and scientific content analysis (SCAN) is a technique for analyzing the words people use. Proponents claim this technique can be used to detect concealed information, missing information, and whether the information that person has provided is true or false.Related to statement analysis is a different technique for analyzing the words people use called statement validity assessment, whose core phase is called criteria-based content analysis (CBCA). CBCA has been accepted as evidence in courts in Germany as early as 1954.Statement analysis involves an investigator searching for linguistic cues and gaps in a subject's testimony or preliminary statements. Ideally, the technique would guide investigators to ask follow-up questions to uncover discrepancies. Creator of Scientific Content Analysis (SCAN) Avinoam Sapir gives the example of someone saying, "I counted the money, put the bag on the counter, and proceeded to go home." Sapir says the statement was literally true: "He counted the money (when you steal you want to know how much you are stealing), and then the subject put the bag on the counter. The subject didn't say that he put the money back in the bag after counting it, because he didn't; he left the empty bag on the counter and walked away with the money." Sapir says that a fundamental principle of statement analysis is that "denying guilt is not the same as denying the act. When one says 'I am not guilty' or 'I am innocent,' they are not denying the act; they are only denying guilt." Sapir claims that it is almost impossible for a guilty person to say "I didn't do it." He asserts that guilty people tend to speak in even greater circumlocutions by saying things like "I had nothing to do with it" or "I am not involved in that."Proponents say statement analysis has proven highly effective as a police interrogation technique.".
- Statement_analysis wikiPageExternalLink lsiscan.com.
- Statement_analysis wikiPageExternalLink statement-analysis.blogspot.com.
- Statement_analysis wikiPageExternalLink www.statementanalysis.com.
- Statement_analysis wikiPageID "13285876".
- Statement_analysis wikiPageRevisionID "594620172".
- Statement_analysis hasPhotoCollection Statement_analysis.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Deception.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Forensic_techniques.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Law_enforcement_techniques.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Lie_detection.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Linguistics.
- Statement_analysis subject Category:Pseudoscience.
- Statement_analysis type Ability105616246.
- Statement_analysis type Abstraction100002137.
- Statement_analysis type Cognition100023271.
- Statement_analysis type ForensicTechniques.
- Statement_analysis type Know-how105616786.
- Statement_analysis type LawEnforcementTechniques.
- Statement_analysis type Method105660268.
- Statement_analysis type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Statement_analysis type Technique105665146.
- Statement_analysis comment "Statement analysis, also called investigative discourse analysis, and scientific content analysis (SCAN) is a technique for analyzing the words people use.".
- Statement_analysis label "Statement analysis".
- Statement_analysis sameAs m.03c0lhm.
- Statement_analysis sameAs Q7603957.
- Statement_analysis sameAs Q7603957.
- Statement_analysis sameAs Statement_analysis.
- Statement_analysis wasDerivedFrom Statement_analysis?oldid=594620172.
- Statement_analysis isPrimaryTopicOf Statement_analysis.