In a recent study, researchers found that some people prefer to lie in order to appear honest rather than telling the truth and appearing as selfish liars.
According to new research published by the American Psychological Association, efforts to avoid appearing dishonest may actually lead to lying.
Shoham Choshen-Hillel, who is a lead researcher of the study said: “Many people care greatly about their reputation and how they will be judged by others, and concern about appearing honest may outweigh our desire to actually be honest, even in situations where it will cost us money to lie.”
“Our findings suggest that when people obtain extremely favorable outcomes, they anticipate other people’s suspicious reactions and prefer lying and appearing honest over telling the truth and appearing as selfish liars,” she added.
The study found similar findings of lying to appear honest in a series of experiments conducted with lawyers and college students in Israel, as well as online participants in the United States and the United Kingdom.
In an experiment with 115 lawyers in Israel, the participants were told to imagine a scenario where they told a client that a case would cost between 60 and 90 billable hours. The lawyer would be working in an office where the client wouldn’t know how many hours were truly spent on the case. Half of the participants were told they had worked 60 hours on the case while the other half were told they worked 90 hours. Then they were asked how many hours they would bill the client. In the 60-hour group, the lawyers reported an average of 62.5 hours, with 17 percent of the group lying to inflate their hours. In the 90-hour group, the lawyers reported an average of 88 hours, with 18 percent of the group lying to report fewer hours than they had actually worked.
When asked for an explanation for the hours they billed, some lawyers in the 90-hour group said they worried that the client would think he had been cheated because the lawyer had lied about the number of billable hours.
In another experiment, 149 undergraduate students at an Israeli university played online dice-rolling and coin-flipping games in private and then reported their scores to a researcher. The participants received approximately 15 cents for each successful coin flip or dice roll they reported.
The computer program was manipulated for half of the students so they received perfect scores in the games, while the other group had random outcomes based on chance.
In the perfect-score group, 24 percent underreported their number of wins even though it cost them money, compared with 4 percent in the random-outcome group. (ANI)