Paul Ekman's research examines why most people are poor at detecting lies from another person's behavior or demeanor. In experiments where students were asked to lie or tell the truth about low-stake topics, those trying to detect lies typically performed at chance levels or slightly better. Ekman conducted experiments with higher-stakes lies that were personally relevant to motivate stronger emotional responses that could reveal deceit. However, detection rates remained low even in these high-stake scenarios. Ekman argues more realistic experiments are needed that include consequences for both truth-tellers and liars to reflect real-world situations where detection is important.