| Literature DB >> 35558151 |
Aldert Vrij1, Sharon Leal1, Samantha Mann1, Zarah Vernham1, Gary Dalton2, Or Serok-Jeppa1, Nir Rozmann3, Galit Nahari3, Ronald P Fisher4.
Abstract
We examined how much information British and Arab truth tellers and lie tellers volunteer in an initial free narrative. Based on cultural differences in communication styles we predicted that British interviewees would report more details and more complications than Arab interviewees (culture main effect). We further predicted that truth tellers would report more details and complications than lie tellers (veracity main effect), particularly in the British sample (Veracity × Culture interaction effect). A total of 78 British and 76 Israeli-Arab participants took part. The experiment was carried out at a British university and an Israeli university. Participants carried out a mission. Truth tellers were instructed to report the mission truthfully in a subsequent interview whereas lie tellers were asked to lie about certain aspects of the mission. The three hypotheses were supported for details, whereas for complications only the predicted veracity main effect occurred.Entities:
Keywords: cross-cultural comparison; deception; information-gathering
Year: 2020 PMID: 35558151 PMCID: PMC9090373 DOI: 10.1080/13218719.2020.1805812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Psychol Law ISSN: 1321-8719