Deception and design: the impact of communication technology on lying behavior

Social psychology has demonstrated that lying is an important, and frequent, part of everyday social interactions. As communication technologies become more ubiquitous in our daily interactions, an important question for developers is to determine how the design of these technologies affects lying behavior. The present research reports the results of a diary study, in which participants recorded all of their social interactions and lies for seven days. The data reveal that participants lied most on the telephone and least in email, and that lying rates in face-to-face and instant messaging interactions were approximately equal. This pattern of results suggests that the design features of communication technologies (e.g., synchronicity, recordability, and copresence) affect lying behavior in important ways, and that these features must be considered by both designers and users when issues of deception and trust arise. The implications for designing applications that increase, decrease or detect deception are discussed.

[1]  Norah E. Dunbar,et al.  Trust and deception in mediated communication , 2003, 36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2003. Proceedings of the.

[2]  Richard L. Daft,et al.  Organizational information requirements, media richness and structural design , 1986 .

[3]  Jun Zheng,et al.  Trust without touch: jumpstarting long-distance trust with initial social activities , 2002, CHI.

[4]  Jay F. Nunamaker,et al.  Detecting Deception through Linguistic Analysis , 2003, ISI.

[5]  Darren Gergle,et al.  Effects of four computer-mediated communications channels on trust development , 2002, CHI.

[6]  Michael T. Motley,et al.  White lies in interpersonal communication: A taxonomy and preliminary investigation of social motivations , 1984 .

[7]  Elizabeth D. Mynatt,et al.  When conventions collide: the tensions of instant messaging attributed , 2002, CHI.

[8]  B. Depaulo,et al.  Who lies? , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  Daniel B. Horn,et al.  The effects of spatial and temporal video distortion on lie detection performance , 2002, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[10]  R. Daft,et al.  Information Richness. A New Approach to Managerial Behavior and Organization Design , 1983 .

[11]  B. Depaulo,et al.  Everyday lies in close and casual relationships. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[12]  Jennifer Preece,et al.  Interpersonal trust and empathy online: a fragile relationship , 2003, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[13]  C. Edgley,et al.  Information control in conversations: Honesty is not always the best policy , 1975 .

[14]  Daniel B. Horn Is seeing believing?: detecting deception in technologically mediated communication , 2001, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[15]  Jeffrey T. Hancock,et al.  Language Use in Computer-Mediated Communication: The Role of Coordination Devices , 2001 .

[16]  B. Depaulo,et al.  Lying in everyday life. , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.