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Teenagers Lie a Lot: A Further Investigation into the Prevalence of Lying

Authors
Levine, T.R.Serota, K.B.Carey, F.Messer, D.
Issue Date
2013
Keywords
Deception; Lying; Prevalence Of Lies; Teenagers
Citation
Communication Research Reports, v.30, no.3, pp.211 - 220
Indexed
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Communication Research Reports
Volume
30
Number
3
Start Page
211
End Page
220
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/105843
DOI
10.1080/08824096.2013.806254
ISSN
0882-4096
Abstract
Although it is commonly believed that lying is ubiquitous, recent findings show large, individual differences in lying, and that the proclivity to lie varies by age. This research surveyed 58 high school students, who were asked how often they had lied in the past 24 hr. It was predicted that high school students would report lying with greater frequency than previous surveys with college student and adult samples, but that the distribution of reported lies by high school students would exhibit a strongly and positively skewed distribution similar to that observed with college student and adult samples. The data were consistent with both predictions. High school students in the sample reported telling, on average, 4.1 lies in the past 24 hr-a rate that is 75% higher than that reported by college students and 150% higher than that reported by a nationwide sample of adults. The data were also skewed, replicating the few prolific liar effect previously documented in college student and adult samples. © 2013 Copyright Eastern Communication Association.
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