Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty

Trustworthiness is a foundation of well-functioning relationships and societies, and thus often perceived as a socially normative behaviour. Correspondingly, a broad array of research found that people tend to act in a trustworthy way and signal their trustworthiness to others, and that trustworthin...

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Main Authors: Karolina A. Ścigała, Christoph Schild, Ingo Zettler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2020-10-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200685
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spelling doaj-e0925f093d7e49a29a181e3e81e529602020-11-25T04:08:28ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032020-10-0171010.1098/rsos.200685200685Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonestyKarolina A. ŚcigałaChristoph SchildIngo ZettlerTrustworthiness is a foundation of well-functioning relationships and societies, and thus often perceived as a socially normative behaviour. Correspondingly, a broad array of research found that people tend to act in a trustworthy way and signal their trustworthiness to others, and that trustworthiness is rewarded. Herein, we explore whether this motivation to behave trustworthily can have socially undesirable effects in terms of leading to dishonesty targeted at fulfilling the trustor's expectations (i.e. trustworthy dishonesty). Furthermore, we examine how the basic trait of Honesty-Humility, which has consistently been found to be linked to both higher honesty and trustworthiness, relates to trustworthy dishonesty, where honesty and trustworthiness are at odds. Specifically, we conducted three pre-registered studies (N = 7080), introducing a novel behavioural game, the lying-trust game, where participants had a chance to lie to act trustworthily. In two studies, we found that, when offered ‘full trust’, participants high in Honesty-Humility (i.e. the top 10%) engaged in trustworthy dishonesty, i.e. lied in order to avoid maximizing their own incentive at the cost of minimizing the incentive of their trustor. This pattern was not present when the trustor offered minimal trust only, as well as among participants low in Honesty-Humility (i.e. the bottom 10%).https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200685trustworthy dishonestytrustworthinesstrustdishonestyhonesty-humilityhexaco
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karolina A. Ścigała
Christoph Schild
Ingo Zettler
spellingShingle Karolina A. Ścigała
Christoph Schild
Ingo Zettler
Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
Royal Society Open Science
trustworthy dishonesty
trustworthiness
trust
dishonesty
honesty-humility
hexaco
author_facet Karolina A. Ścigała
Christoph Schild
Ingo Zettler
author_sort Karolina A. Ścigała
title Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
title_short Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
title_full Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
title_fullStr Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
title_full_unstemmed Dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: Honesty-Humility and trustworthy dishonesty
title_sort dishonesty as a signal of trustworthiness: honesty-humility and trustworthy dishonesty
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Trustworthiness is a foundation of well-functioning relationships and societies, and thus often perceived as a socially normative behaviour. Correspondingly, a broad array of research found that people tend to act in a trustworthy way and signal their trustworthiness to others, and that trustworthiness is rewarded. Herein, we explore whether this motivation to behave trustworthily can have socially undesirable effects in terms of leading to dishonesty targeted at fulfilling the trustor's expectations (i.e. trustworthy dishonesty). Furthermore, we examine how the basic trait of Honesty-Humility, which has consistently been found to be linked to both higher honesty and trustworthiness, relates to trustworthy dishonesty, where honesty and trustworthiness are at odds. Specifically, we conducted three pre-registered studies (N = 7080), introducing a novel behavioural game, the lying-trust game, where participants had a chance to lie to act trustworthily. In two studies, we found that, when offered ‘full trust’, participants high in Honesty-Humility (i.e. the top 10%) engaged in trustworthy dishonesty, i.e. lied in order to avoid maximizing their own incentive at the cost of minimizing the incentive of their trustor. This pattern was not present when the trustor offered minimal trust only, as well as among participants low in Honesty-Humility (i.e. the bottom 10%).
topic trustworthy dishonesty
trustworthiness
trust
dishonesty
honesty-humility
hexaco
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200685
work_keys_str_mv AT karolinaascigała dishonestyasasignaloftrustworthinesshonestyhumilityandtrustworthydishonesty
AT christophschild dishonestyasasignaloftrustworthinesshonestyhumilityandtrustworthydishonesty
AT ingozettler dishonestyasasignaloftrustworthinesshonestyhumilityandtrustworthydishonesty
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