Twisting the truth
Jun. 20th, 2002 09:31 amA study has found that men and women both lie about the same amount, but there is a gender gap: apparently men tend to lie to make themselves look better, and women tend to lie to make the other person feel better.
How did they determine this? They videotaped pairs of grad students meeting for the first time, telling them it was a study about reactions to meeting someone new. Then the grad students got to watch the tape to see if they'd said anything inaccurate.
I read about it here, while the actual research was published in the June issue of the Journal of Basic and Applied Social Psychology.
Also cited was another study showing that leaders tend to have better skills at lying than others (though this does not mean that they lie more, apparently). Interesting.
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How did they determine this? They videotaped pairs of grad students meeting for the first time, telling them it was a study about reactions to meeting someone new. Then the grad students got to watch the tape to see if they'd said anything inaccurate.
I read about it here, while the actual research was published in the June issue of the Journal of Basic and Applied Social Psychology.
Also cited was another study showing that leaders tend to have better skills at lying than others (though this does not mean that they lie more, apparently). Interesting.
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no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 07:03 am (UTC)While this may be useful for determining differences between genders and whatever, it's not necessarily a good measure for how much people lie in general. The focus of the NPR report seemes to be "People lie a lot!", while all this study tells me is that people lie a lot when they are meeting someone new.
no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 07:10 am (UTC)a
no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 08:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 08:33 am (UTC)I think in many ways, the more interesting part is people's perception of their own honesty. It at least shows a measure of self-honesty that they were able to acknowledge afterwards where they were not truthful.
not particularly
Date: 2002-06-20 10:13 am (UTC)They know how tiresome it is when people introduce themselves with a cacophony of tooting their own horns.
I mean, I'm not the only self-deprecating one out there.
Although, I suppose downplaying one's own self-centered-ness is a sort of deception to make oneself look better...
ow, my brain hurts.
no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 10:53 am (UTC)But I might feel differently if I were in a situation where I wasn't reasonably confident that I'd do fine by telling the truth.
no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 10:56 am (UTC)Is this a lie?
Date: 2002-06-20 11:25 am (UTC)I don't know whether the people in the study were out-and-out lying ("Nice dress!"), or stretching the truth a bit more than they'd realized, or just exaggeration to a greater degree ("There were millions of them!").
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no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 11:51 am (UTC)I have found myself not giving certain details about something to some friends, while not giving them to other friends, which leaves me remembering who I've told what, even without actual lying.
Case in point: I don't talk to my parents about much of my social life. However, this means that sometimes I have to decide to talk about event X rather than event Y when talking with them.
I am not proud of this, but I've not yet worked my way out of doing this with them, perhaps because I'm the always-does-what-parents-prefer kid, at least until recently, and it's hard to change, risk rejection, etc.
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no subject
Date: 2002-06-20 12:30 pm (UTC)