The Danger of Small Lies
Psychology Today,
Here's why it's important to nip small lies in the bud.
Here's why it's important to nip small lies in the bud.
In a 2002 study, 60 percent of people were found to lie at least once during a 10-minute conversation, with most people telling…
Posted in: en.hypothesesI can’t stop thinking about Neuroskeptic’s post “You Are Your Brain, So Don’t Blame Your Brain,” whi...
Plus une personne ment, plus son cerveau prendrait goût au mensonge. Le mensonge est ce comportement faisant modifier plus ou…
There may be a scientific reason why people who cheat often become repeat offenders.
All this week, we have focused on research about lying but there are multiple other articles we want to share with you that…
Research suggests that lying changes the brain, making it easier to do each time, but is there an advantage to mastering this…
Rebobine sua mente pela última semana. Quantas vezes você foi tentado a agir desonestamente?Talvez te deram troco errado no bar…
En la novela The Tailor of Panama (El sastre de Panamá), de John Le Carré, el protagonista Harry Pendel, sastre de nacionalidad…
Cast your mind back over the past week. How many times were you tempted to act dishonestly? Perhaps you were given too much…
Do you teach children to lie? I do. All the time. And you do, too! If you’re like most American parents, you point to presents…
How lying takes our brains down a ‘slippery slope…
Are They Pathological Liars? Narcissists? Psychopaths? “Masterful Manipulators”? Trump Spokesman’s Lecture on Media Accuracy Is…
Launched today, the annual Altmetric Top 100 highlights the research papers published in the last year that have generated…
From Garrett et al., some information on neural correlates of what might be going on in Donald Trump's brain.... Dishonesty…
On moral judgments
Lies are more elusive than previously thought, making it difficult for the brain to identify or predict a person's actions.
Welcome to the Altmetric High Five! On a monthly basis, my High Five posts examine a selection of the most popular research…
The recent finding that telling lies induces changes in the brain has stimulated a number of misrepresentations that may wreak…
Neuroskeptic writes, "Regular readers will recall that I have myself often criticized the idea of ‘blaming the brain’ for our…
"You shouldn’t blame lying on the brain", according to Prof. Richard Gunderman writing in The Conversation. Gunderman notes…
Just a few of the intriguing headlines involving members of the TED community this week: The cascading effect of small lies.
The more tall tales we tell, the less we worry about it, a new study suggests.
「うそをつくほど平気に」、不正直に脳が適応 研究以下は、記事の抜ľ
Rayshell Clapper, STEAM…
Liars are able to tell the most astounding whoppers without feeling bad. The way the brain works is helping them. Dr Jeremy Dean…
The recent finding that telling lies induces changes in the brain has stimulated a number of misrepresentations that may wreak…
A new study suggests the brain gets more desensitized to lying with each lie you tell.Read More
The strength of the signals in our brain's emotional center decrease each time we lie, making it easier and easier to do.
Deceptive PracticesWhy one little white lie might be dangerousEveryone tells harmless white lies every now and then, but…
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Neil Garrett PhD Student Affective Brain Lab Department of Experimental Psychology…
Guru…
What makes a good liar? First and foremost, someone who does it a lot — like any other skill, lying becomes easier with practice.
Researchers report amygdala activity declines when the magnitude of an untruth escalates.
This is what happens to your brain when you lie constantly.
I ricercatori hanno dimostrato che il nostro cervello si abitua alle bugie e per questo chi mente è destinato a diventare un…
Their experiments found that each time we lie, our brains may get a little less upset about it, which makes it easier to do.
Telling many small lies make you stop caring about the big ones.
A study led by University College London researchers Neil Garrett and Tali Sharot provides the first empirical evidence that…
10月24日《自然—神经科学》在线发表的一篇论文显示,反复的利己不诚实Ŝ
It’s election season and, as ever, truths are being bent and fibs are being peddled as candidates clamber towards the top of…
Telling small lies desensitises our brains to the associated negative emotions and may encourage us to tell bigger lies in…
Scans reveal that as we tell more and more fibs, our brains become desensitised to lying, allowing dishonesty to snowball