<p>Section 1 - Background, History, and Theory<br>1. Physiological Measures in the Detection of Deception and Concealed Information<br>2. Concealed Information Test: Theoretical Background<br>3. The External Validity of Studies Examining the Detection of Concealed Knowledge, Using the Concealed Information Test (CIT)<br>4. Physiological Responses in the Concealed Information Test: A Selective Review in the Light of Recognition and Concealment<br>5. Field Inventions and Findings of the Concealed Information Test in Japan</p> <p>Section 2 - Neuroscience Applications<br>6. Effects of Motivational Manipulations on the P300-based Complex Trial Protocol for Concealed Information Detection<br>7. Detecting Deception and Concealed Information with Neuroimaging</p> <p>Section 3 - Ocular Applications<br>8. Detecting Concealed Knowledge from Ocular Responses<br>9. Ocular-Motor Deception Test</p> <p>Section 4 - Behavioral Applications<br>10. Deception Detection with Behavioral Methods: The Autobiographical Implicit Association Test (aIAT), CIT-RT, Mouse Dynamics and Keystroke Dynamics<br>11. Challenges for the Application of Reaction Time-based Deception Detection Methods</p> <p>Section 5 - Verbal and Interviewing Applications<br>12. How to Interview to Elicit Concealed Information: Introducing the Shift-of-Strategy (SoS) Approach<br>13. Verbal Lie Detection Tools from an Applied Perspective<br>14. The Applicability of the Verifiability Approach to the Real World</p> <p>Section 6 - Special Issues<br>15. Personality, Demographic, and Psychophysiological Correlates of People's Self-Assessed Lying Abilities<br>16. Detecting Concealed Information on a Large Scale: Possibilities and Problems<br>17. Admissibility and Constitutional Issues of the Concealed Information Test in American Courts: An Update</p>