Abstract
Like “every contact” in forensics, deception leaves a trace: not fingerprints or DNA but—in many cases—evidence of conduct that exploits the belief-formation and reasoning processes of the deceived. Every deception takes advantage of particularities in the model that the deceiver has constructed of its target, whether that target be human, an autonomous system, or a human-AI team. This paper focuses on the former: aspects of psychology and sociology used to fool people. Drawing on the work of professional deceivers from disciplines such as defence, cybersecurity and stage magic, we examine the factors in play and propose a framework within which those factors may be operationalised as an AI system that will be capable of detecting deception because it is capable of being deceived.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Proceedings of the 2025 IEEE Statistical Signal Processing Workshop (SSP) |
Number of pages | 5 |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 23 Apr 2025 |