You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task
Both the ability to deceive others, and the ability to detect deception, have long been proposed to confer an evolutionary advantage. Deception detection has been studied extensively, and the finding that typical individuals fare little better than chance in detecting deception is one of the more ro...
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Frontiers Media S.A.
2012-04-01
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Online Access: | http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00087/full |
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doaj-0ea892ab4d7c4bb19d7a022aa98f283d2020-11-25T03:00:56ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612012-04-01610.3389/fnhum.2012.0008721505You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception taskGordon R.T. Wright0Christopher J Berry1Geoffrey eBird2Birkbeck College, University of LondonUniversity College LondonBirkbeck College, University of LondonBoth the ability to deceive others, and the ability to detect deception, have long been proposed to confer an evolutionary advantage. Deception detection has been studied extensively, and the finding that typical individuals fare little better than chance in detecting deception is one of the more robust in the behavioral sciences. Surprisingly, little research has examined individual differences in lie-production ability. As a consequence, as far as we are aware, no previous study has investigated whether there exists an association between the ability to lie successfully and the ability to detect lies. Furthermore, only a minority of studies have examined deception as it naturally occurs; in a social, interactive setting. The present study therefore explored the relationship between these two facets of deceptive behavior by employing a novel competitive interactive deception task. For the first time, signal-detection theory was used to measure performance in both the detection and production of deception. A significant relationship was found between the deception-related abilities; those who could accurately detect a lie were able to produce statements that others found difficult to classify as deceptive or truthful. Furthermore, neither ability was related to measures of intelligence or emotional ability. We therefore suggest the existence of an underlying deception-general ability that varies across individuals.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00087/fulldeceptionlyingsignal-detection theoryDeception-detectionSocial-cognition |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Gordon R.T. Wright Christopher J Berry Geoffrey eBird |
spellingShingle |
Gordon R.T. Wright Christopher J Berry Geoffrey eBird You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task Frontiers in Human Neuroscience deception lying signal-detection theory Deception-detection Social-cognition |
author_facet |
Gordon R.T. Wright Christopher J Berry Geoffrey eBird |
author_sort |
Gordon R.T. Wright |
title |
You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
title_short |
You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
title_full |
You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
title_fullStr |
You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
title_full_unstemmed |
You can’t kid a kidder: Association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
title_sort |
you can’t kid a kidder: association between production and detection of deception in an interactive deception task |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |
issn |
1662-5161 |
publishDate |
2012-04-01 |
description |
Both the ability to deceive others, and the ability to detect deception, have long been proposed to confer an evolutionary advantage. Deception detection has been studied extensively, and the finding that typical individuals fare little better than chance in detecting deception is one of the more robust in the behavioral sciences. Surprisingly, little research has examined individual differences in lie-production ability. As a consequence, as far as we are aware, no previous study has investigated whether there exists an association between the ability to lie successfully and the ability to detect lies. Furthermore, only a minority of studies have examined deception as it naturally occurs; in a social, interactive setting. The present study therefore explored the relationship between these two facets of deceptive behavior by employing a novel competitive interactive deception task. For the first time, signal-detection theory was used to measure performance in both the detection and production of deception. A significant relationship was found between the deception-related abilities; those who could accurately detect a lie were able to produce statements that others found difficult to classify as deceptive or truthful. Furthermore, neither ability was related to measures of intelligence or emotional ability. We therefore suggest the existence of an underlying deception-general ability that varies across individuals. |
topic |
deception lying signal-detection theory Deception-detection Social-cognition |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00087/full |
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