That line is clickbait and not reliable psychology. There is no proven method where two questions can reliably expose a liar.
Lying behavior is complex, and even trained professionals (police interrogators, psychologists) cannot detect deception accurately just from a simple question trick.
đź§ What science actually says
People sometimes try to spot lying through:
- body language
- eye contact
- hesitation
But research shows:
- Humans are only slightly better than chance at detecting lies (~50–60%)
- There is no universal “tell”
❓ Why “2 questions” doesn’t work
Different people react differently:
- Some liars stay calm and confident
- Honest people can look nervous under pressure
- Cultural and personality differences change behavior
So a fixed trick does not work reliably.
đź§Ş What professionals actually use
Experts rely on:
- detailed inconsistencies in stories
- verified facts
- timeline checking
- evidence comparison
- repeated questioning over time
Not quick “gotcha” questions.
đź§ Bottom line
👉 There is no magic “2-question lie test”
👉 Lie detection requires context, not tricks
👉 Viral claims oversimplify human behavior
If you want, I can show you:
👉 the most common real signs of deception psychologists study
👉 or why people believe lie-detection myths so easily