Learning to lie: Effects of practice on the cognitive cost of lying

B. Van Bockstaele, B. Verschuere, T. Moens, Kristina Suchotzki, Evelyne Debey, Adriaan Spruyt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cognitive theories on deception posit that lying requires more cognitive resources than telling the truth. In line with this idea, it has been demonstrated that deceptive responses are typically associated with increased response times and higher error rates compared to truthful responses. Although the cognitive cost of lying has been assumed to be resistant to practice, it has recently been shown that people who are trained to lie can reduce this cost. In the present study (nD42), we further explored the effects of practice on one's ability to lie by manipulating the proportions of lie and truth-trials in a Sheffield lie test across three phases: Baseline (50% lie, 50% truth), Training (frequent-lie group: 75% lie, 25% truth; control group: 50% lie, 50% truth; and frequent-truth group: 25% lie, 75% truth), and Test (50% lie, 50% truth). The results showed that lying became easier while participants were trained to lie more often and that lying became more difficult while participants were trained to tell the truth more often. Furthermore, these effects did carry over to the test phase, but only for the specific items that were used for the training manipulation. Hence, our study confirms that relatively little practice is enough to alter the cognitive cost of lying, although this effect does not persist over time for non-practiced items.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberArticle 526
Pages (from-to)526
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume3
Issue numberNOV
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Dec 2012
Externally publishedYes

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