Are People Lying More Since The Rise Of Social Media And Smartphones?

Some forms of technology seem to facilitate lying more than others.
President Donald Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, looks at his cellphone outside the White House on the South Lawn before US President Donald Trump delivers remarks and participates in the White House Sports and Fitnes... President Donald Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, looks at his cellphone outside the White House on the South Lawn before US President Donald Trump delivers remarks and participates in the White House Sports and Fitness Day on May 30, 2018 in Washington, DC. (NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. It first appeared at The Conversation.

Technology has given people more ways to connect, but has it also given them more opportunities to lie?

You might text your friend a white lie to get out of going to dinner, exaggerate your height on a dating profile to appear more attractive or invent an excuse to your boss over email to save face.

Social psychologists and communication scholars have long wondered not just who lies the most, but where people tend to lie the most – that is, in person or through some other communication medium.

A seminal 2004 study was among the first to investigate the connection between deception rates and technology. Since then, the ways we communicate have shifted – fewer phone calls and more social media messaging, for example – and I wanted to see how well earlier results held up.

The link between deception and technology

Back in 2004, communication researcher Jeff Hancock and his colleagues had 28 students report the number of social interactions they had via face-to-face communication, the phone, instant messaging and email over seven days. Students also reported the number of times they lied in each social interaction.

The results suggested people told the most lies per social interaction on the phone. The fewest were told via email.

The findings aligned with a framework Hancock called the “feature-based model.” According to this model, specific aspects of a technology – whether people can communicate back and forth seamlessly, whether the messages are fleeting and whether communicators are distant – predict where people tend to lie the most.

In Hancock’s study, the most lies per social interaction occurred via the technology with all of these features: the phone. The fewest occurred on email, where people couldn’t communicate synchronously and the messages were recorded.

The Hancock Study, revisited

When Hancock conducted his study, only students at a few select universities could create a Facebook account. The iPhone was in its early stages of development, a highly confidential project nicknamed “Project Purple.”

What would his results look like nearly 20 years later?

In a new study, I recruited a larger group of participants and studied interactions from more forms of technology. A total of 250 people recorded their social interactions and number of interactions with a lie over seven days, across face-to-face communication, social media, the phone, texting, video chat and email.

As in Hancock’s study, people told the most lies per social interaction over media that were synchronous and recordless and when communicators were distant: over the phone or on video chat. They told the fewest lies per social interaction via email. Interestingly, though, the differences across the forms of communication were small. Differences among participants – how much people varied in their lying tendencies – were more predictive of deception rates than differences among media.

Despite changes in the way people communicate over the past two decades – along with ways the COVID-19 pandemic changed how people socialize – people seem to lie systematically and in alignment with the feature-based model.

There are several possible explanations for these results, though more work is needed to understand exactly why different media lead to different lying rates. It’s possible that certain media are better facilitators of deception than others. Some media – the phone, video chat – might make deception feel easier or less costly to a social relationship if caught.

Deception rates might also differ across technology because people use some forms of technology for certain social relationships. For example, people might only email their professional colleagues, while video chat might be a better fit for more personal relationships.

[Over 115,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]

Technology misunderstood

To me, there are two key takeaways.

First, there are, overall, small differences in lying rates across media. An individual’s tendency to lie matters more than whether someone is emailing or talking on the phone.

Second, there’s a low rate of lying across the board. Most people are honest – a premise consistent with truth-default theory, which suggests most people report being honest most of the time and there are only a few prolific liars in a population.

Since 2004, social media have become a primary place for interacting with other people. Yet a common misperception persists that communicating online or via technology, as opposed to in person, leads to social interactions that are lower in quantity and quality.

People often believe that just because we use technology to interact, honesty is harder to come by and users aren’t well served.

Not only is this perception misguided, but it is also unsupported by empirical evidence. The belief that lying is rampant in the digital age just doesn’t match the data.

David Markowitz is an assistant professor of Social Media Data Analytics at the University of Oregon.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Conversation
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Notable Replies

  1. They left out the front door as a means of communication.

    “Go away, I’m not home!!!”

  2. All text-based media allow for more dishonesty. You can’t read tone or body language, so all of the non-verbal cues to catch someone in a lie are stripped away, and we all quickly figure that out.

    So yes, people lie more in all forms of text. More forms of text, more lies. It’s not because of the media, it’s because humanity lies, we’re just generally not great at getting away with it in person.

  3. If you’re a Republican, then yes.

    No lie…

  4. I know TFG sure did. Hit the ball right outta the park.

  5. Technology has been dumbed down by the likes of Microsoft and Facebook, etc., which makes people more prone to lying because they are using “bells-and-whistles” technology instead of, you know, REAL technology, and they try to cope with what they think is “the latest and greatest”.

    Websites are more eye candy than information systems. When I can type faster than my laptop can accept input, I know how far we have fallen from what we imagined mere decades ago.

    Information should be flying to users at the speed of light. Instead, we have to sit and wait for web pages to load because they are graphic-intensive instead of information-intensive.

    We are far short of the ideals that led to personal computers in the first place. And there seems to be no end in sight. The latest Windows 11 OS is just another shifting around of GUI elements instead of actual progress.

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