The relation between having siblings and children’s cheating and
lie-telling behaviors. Alison M. O'Connor, Angela D. Evans. Journal of
Experimental Child Psychology, Volume 168, April 2018, Pages 49–60.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2017.12.006
Highlights
• Time impact of having siblings on children’s dishonesty was examined.
• Children who had a sibling were more likely to cheat than children without a sibling.
• Children with a younger sibling were more likely to lie as the age difference increased.
• Children with a younger sibling were better able to maintain their lie.
Abstract:
The current study investigated how having at least one child sibling
influenced children’s dishonest behaviors. Furthermore, for those
children with a sibling, we examined whether having a younger or older
sibling and the age difference between siblings influenced deceptive
acts. Children between 3 and 8 years of age (N = 130) completed the
temptation resistance paradigm, where they played a guessing game and
were asked not to peek at a toy in the experimenter’s absence.
Children’s peeking behavior was used as a measure of cheating, and
children’s responses when asked whether they had peeked were used as
measures of lie-telling. Results demonstrate that siblings do indeed
influence children’s deceptive behaviors. First, children with a sibling
were significantly more likely to cheat compared with children without
any siblings. Next, for those with a sibling, children with a larger age
difference with their younger sibling(s) were significantly more likely
to lie compared with children closer in age, and children with a
younger sibling were significantly more likely to maintain their lie
during follow-up questioning compared with children with an older
sibling.
Keywords: Children; Siblings; Cheating; Lie-telling; Honesty; Deception
Monday, January 8, 2018
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment