Background: Previous functional MRI (fMRI) studies have demonstrated group differences in brain activity between deceptive and honest responses. The functional connectivity network related to lie-telling remains largely uncharacterized. Methods: In this study, we designed a lie-telling experiment that emphasized strategy devising. Thirty-two subjects underwent fMRI while responding to questions in a truthful, inverse, or deceitful manner. For each subject, whole-brain functional connectivity networks were constructed from correlations among brain regions for the lie-telling and truth-telling conditions. Then, a multivariate pattern analysis approach was used to distinguish lie-telling from truth-telling based on the functional connectivity networks. Results: The classification results demonstrated that lie-telling could be differentiated from truth-telling with an accuracy of 82.81% (85.94% for lie-telling, 79.69% for truth-telling). The connectivities related to the fronto-parietal networks, cerebellum and cingulo-opercular networks are most discriminating, implying crucial roles for these three networks in the processing of deception. Conclusions: The current study may shed new light on the neural pattern of deception from a functional integration viewpoint.
CITATION STYLE
Jiang, W., Liu, H., Zeng, L., Liao, J., Shen, H., Luo, A., … Wang, W. (2015). Decoding the processing of lying using functional connectivity MRI. Behavioral and Brain Functions, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12993-014-0046-4
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