Email helps to deceive people who lie
To know if a person is hiding the truth, or a dishonest friend, each person can find out how he or she uses the words in the email.
According to scientists, using language when making certain announcements may indicate that a person is lying or protecting secrets. Research from the US University said that people who hide facts often use deceptive words and negative emotions and use fewer words 'me ' than usual.
Length and number of emails is also a recognizable feature when secret concealers often write longer emails, and send more emails than before.
Email can let people know if someone is honest or not.(Photo: Alamy)
The Carnegie Mellon University team, Pennsylvania State, tracks 62 adults who are hiding their secrets. Scientists found that more than half of the secrets are related to love or sex, while the rest try to hide something about family, spirit, work or related issues. law.
In another study, Dr. James Pennebaker and colleagues studied the emails of many women during depression, and were likely to want to stay alone. They found that these women use more email and write more words than normal women.
Dr. Pennebaker said, depressed people often spend a lot of time hiding it by using their own communication strategy.
Dr. Pennebaker and colleagues who previously discovered the use of language in politicians may also reveal secrets. Specifically, President George W. Bush used fewer words 'I' during the invasion of Iraq and so was President Harry Truman before the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in Japan.
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