By Greg Wright
Certified Fraud Examiner
Certified Financial Planner
National Speaker
Certified Fraud Examiner
Certified Financial Planner
National Speaker
Sometimes,
when searching for the truth, we jump at a promising shortcut. The Mehrabian 7-33-55 rule was, for many, that shortcut. But, the understanding of many is incorrect.
The rule is not a lie detector.
When
I ask an audience to yell out, "What do you think is more important,
verbal or nonverbal behavior?", the audience will universally yell out "body
language."
This important rule is that
communication is only 7 percent verbal and 93 percent
non-verbal.
Albert Mehrabian, Professor Emeritus of
Psychology at the University of California is credited for this rule. Although he originally trained as an
engineer, he is best known for his research on the relative importance of
verbal and nonverbal messages.
His two research studies developed the
7-38-55 Rule of
Personal Communication. In communication, according to the research, a
speaker's words are only a fraction of his efforts. The pitch and tone of his
voice, the speed and rhythm of the spoken word, and the pauses between those
words express more than what is being communicated by words alone.
Do words alone only account for 7% of communication?
Be careful.
Mehrabian said, "Please note that this and other equations
regarding (the) relative importance of verbal and nonverbal messages were
derived from experiments dealing with communications of feelings and attitudes."
"Unless a communicator
is talking about their feelings or attitudes, these equations are not
applicable."
Except for feelings & attitudes, the
Mehrabian's 7% rule is not a lie detector.
The transcribed words of a witness or suspect are
often more useful in determining the true facts of an event than a video
recording of the statement. Body
language will often sidetrack you from the truth. You need to focus on the
words.
More on that later. I have conducted hundreds of interviews of
witnesses and fraud suspects.
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