Teens tell the most lies - study

The study results, published in a paper entitled From Junior to Senior Pinocchio, will come as no surprise to parents

The study results, published in a paper entitled From Junior to Senior Pinocchio, will come as no surprise to parents

Published Aug 3, 2015

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London - When it comes to bending the truth, no one can match adolescents in terms of the frequency and proficiency with which they tell lies, according to the first study into age-related dishonesty.

The study results, published in a paper entitled From Junior to Senior Pinocchio, will come as no surprise to parents accustomed to hearing their offspring mutter traditional teen fibs such as "everyone else is doing it"; "I haven't got any homework"; or "I'm spending the night with a friend".

Not only did the study of more than 1,000 people aged six to 77 confirm that peak dishonesty occurs in adolescence, it found that young children and pensioners are the most honest people in society. That's because the frequency with which we lie and our ability to get away with it both increase to young adulthood then decline with age, possibly because of changes that occur in the brain.

"Our research shows that young adults are, overall, the best liars,'' say the researchers, whose study is published in the journal Acta Psychologica. "Lying frequency increased during childhood, peaked in adolescent years, and then decreased into old age, to the point where seniors lie with similar frequency to the youngest children.

"We also found that lying proficiency improved during childhood, excelled in young adulthood, and worsened throughout adulthood. Our findings suggest that whereas the lies of older people would be relatively easy to catch, young adults would be more successful in getting away with their lies.''

The psychologists say that, given the mental demands involved being deceitful, it is striking that no research has previously compared lying proficiency and frequency across the lifespan. They point out that most crimes are committed by adolescents and young adults, so "our findings concur" with the idea that more stringent tests are required when law enforcement agencies try to detect "deception" among young people.

The study, by researchers at the universities of Ghent, Vanderbilt, Amsterdam, and Maastricht, involved 1,005 people who completed a number of psychological tests and were quizzed about how often they played fast and loose with the truth.

Results show that, overall, we tell 2.19 lies a day, with wide age variations. Around 75 percent of adolescents lie, with an average of nearly three lies a day, but with 60 percent telling up to five fibs daily.

In comparison, only 37 percent of very young children told lies, averaging 1.7 a day, while 63 percent of young adults lied daily, averaging 1.9 deceits a day.

Fifty percent of middle-aged people lied, but the lowest rates were found in people aged 60 and older. So-called seniors had the lowest daily lie rate - 1.5 - and 55 percent told no lies at all.

Just why there should be such big age differences is not clear, but there are a number of theories.

Lying "considerably challenges our cognitive abilities" and is more mentally demanding than telling the truth, say the researchers. One theory is that age-related changes in the frontal lobe, a brain region that is among the first to deteriorate during ageing, may lead to reduced lying skills.

So-called executive control, an umbrella term for the management of cognitive processes including working memory, reasoning and problem solving, is also a key part of lying and increases across childhood, peaks in late adolescence and then declines.

Another theory is that the telling of lies peaks in adolescence as a by-product of the teenage urge to break free from their parents.

The Independent on Sunday

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