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dr. SC (Sophie) van der Zee

Biography

Biography

Dr. Sophie van der Zee has a multi-disciplinary background in psychology, economics, and computer science. She holds a position as assistant professor at the Erasmus School of Economics. She also serves as the academic director of the MSc Behavioural Economics and takes part in Sectorplan SSH-Breed.

Sophie combines this multi-disciplinary background to conduct research on the interplay of human behavior and security. She is specialised in the prevention and detection of deception and dishonest behaviour, both in a face-to-face and online setting. She developed a method for automatically measuring human behavior using motion capture equipment and applied this method to the context of deception detection. She also developed the first personalized deception detection model based on the tweets of former US president Donald Trump. A relevant application area of her research concerns the human factor in cyber, where she investigated how scammers persuade their potential victims, how people put themselves at risk by noncompliance with online banking regulations, and why people do not report cybercrime victimization. In her most recent line of research, she investigates to which extent cyber awareness questionnaires are a useful tool for predicting real world cyber secure behaviour. From a behavioral economics perspective, Sophie also conducts research on promoting sustainable behavior in a hospital context as part of the .

Sophie actively brings deception researchers across the world together. She founded the . This society organises two types of events. They organise Decepticon, the first interdisciplinary conference on deception. Previous conferences have taken place at the University of Cambridge (UK), Stanford (US), and online. And every first Tuesday of the month, they organise Lies and Allies’ Tuesdays, a free webinar where deception researchers and practitioners from around the world share the latest insights and knowledge.

Erasmus School of Economics

Assistant professor | Behavioural Economics
Email
vanderzee@ese.eur.nl

More information

Work

  • Sophie Van Der Zee, Tamarah Verhoog, Theo Post, Pilar Garcia-Gomez, Erik M. van Raaij, Jan Carel Diehl & Nicole Hunfeld (2025) - - Nursing in critical care, 30 (1), 37-46 - doi: -
  • Ronald Poppe, Sophie van der Zee, Paul J. Taylor, Ross J. Anderson & Remco C. Veltkamp (2024) - - Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 48 (1), 137-159 - doi: -
  • Laura Jasper, Santeri Puttonen, Martijn de Jong, Sophie van der Zee & Michel Rademaker (2023) - -
  • Nicole Hunfeld, Jan Carel Diehl, Sophie van der Zee, Diederik Gommers & Erik van Raaij (2023) - - ICU Management & Practice, 23 (3), 106-109 -
  • Herman Bolhaar, Kim Brouwers, Madeleine van der Bruggen, Suzanne Kok, Maryam Peters & Sophie van der Zee (2022) - -
  • Paul K. Miller, Sophie Van Der Zee & David Elliott (2022) - - Psychological Reports, 125 (2), 1086-1102 - doi: -
  • Sophie Van Der Zee, Ronald Poppe, Alice Havrileck & Aurélien Baillon (2021) - - Psychological Science, 33 (1), 3-17 - doi: -
  • Sophie Van der Zee, Paul Taylor, Ruth Wong, John Dixon & Tarek Menacere (2021) - - Royal Society Open Science, 8 (1) - doi: -
  • Steve G. A. van de Weijer, Rutger Leukfeldt & Sophie van der Zee (2021) - - doi:
  • Sophie Van Der Zee (2021) - - doi:

  • Sophie van der Zee (26 November 2024) - Liegen? Kleine kans dat iemand je betrapt, zegt de expert
  • Sophie van der Zee (5 November 2024) - Herken jij de leugenaar?
  • Sophie van der Zee (23 September 2024) - Bluf tijdens een sollicitatiegesprek: zo prik je erdoorheen
  • Sophie van der Zee (13 February 2023) - Leugenonderzoeker Sophie van der Zee: ‘Vrouwen liegen om aardig gevonden te worden, mannen doen het vaker voor eigen gewin’
  • Sophie van der Zee (30 January 2022) - Trump's Tweets: Telling Truth From Fiction From The Words He Used
  • Sophie van der Zee (22 September 2021) - -ÌÇÐÄÖ±²¥: Technology better at lie detection than humans
  • Sophie van der Zee (30 January 2021) - New sign to catch men LYING revealed by psychologists
  • Sophie van der Zee (15 January 2021) - How can you spot a liar? See if their moves look a bit too familiar
  • Sophie van der Zee (13 January 2021) - How to tell if someone is lying? See if they copy your body language, says study
  • Sophie van der Zee (12 May 2019) - What’s behind Donald Trump’s astounding avalanche of lies? Nothing good

    Brainfeed

    Start date approval
    October 2024
    End date approval
    October 2027
    Place
    ZEIST
    Description
    Masterclass geven aan artsen

    Deception research society

    Start date approval
    November 2024
    End date approval
    November 2027
    Place
    3512VR
    Description
    Oprichter en bestuur Deception research society

    • Shalvi Harshad Thakur

      Behavioural Economics for Sustainable Interventions in Hospital Care

    News regarding dr. SC (Sophie) van der Zee

    Dutch broadcast 'De Nacht van NTR Wetenschap' reveals the dynamics of lies with expert Sophie van der Zee

    Sophie van der Zee of Erasmus School of Economics dives into the fascinating world of lies.
    Sophie van der Zee

    The use of deceptive language: a new look at president Donald Trump

    Assistant Professor Sophie van der Zee reflects on linguistic patterns in president Donald Trump’s deceptive tweets.
    Sophie van der Zee

    Sophie van der Zee launches innovative lying game app

    The app, designed as an engaging game, aims to shed light on the complex world of deception and human behaviour.
    A small man with a phone in his hand is controlled by strings

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