lower stress and critical incidents but part of the training is also using mental imagery and officer dispositions, to help them with emotional instances, implicit biases, climate culture diversity and those types of things as well. i wondered about that. i m glad you brought that up. because i think off the top of my head, when you think about this bigger picture and we ve been following this young unarmed african-american man, mr. kerrick, it was deemed a mistrial. he was trying to get help from somebody s home, knocked on the door, she thought it was an intruder, a police officer pulled out a taser and one pulled out a gun, shot him ten different times and talking to lawyers, obviously this officer came into this situation of preconceived bias thinking this was an intruder. i m wondering, when you train a an officer and go through everything that you re talking about with the brain, how do you change those intangible, the
great at lying. one of the things they start to get tense. if you notice shoulders going up, they start looking around, getting chippy with eyes. number one indicator is what they re doing with their feet. we are lying on average once every ten minutes. every american. so you re lying once every ten minutes, almost everybody is on the naughty list. here is how the brain works. lying activity takes place in the frontal lobe for truth suppression. limb pick system. it is responsible for treating memories and mental imagery. you re lying not because of what you want to do, what your brain demands of you. the chemicals in your brain, didn t mean to lie. is it lying or someone trying to embellish a story to basically say i did this, and then they continue to add more adjectives to be more descriptive, and before you know it, it left the barn so to speak