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Original Articles

Teenagers Lie a Lot: A Further Investigation into the Prevalence of Lying

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Pages 211-220 | Published online: 12 Jul 2013

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (3)

Kim B. Serota, Timothy R. Levine & Tony Docan-Morgan. (2022) Unpacking variation in lie prevalence: Prolific liars, bad lie days, or both?. Communication Monographs 89:3, pages 307-331.
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Lindsay Neuberger. (2016) Self-reports of information seeking: Is social desirability in play?. Atlantic Journal of Communication 24:4, pages 242-249.
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Timothy R. Levine, Mohamed Vaqas Ali, Marleah Dean, Rasha A. Abdulla & Karina Garcia-Ruano. (2016) Toward a Pan-cultural Typology of Deception Motives. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research 45:1, pages 1-12.
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Articles from other publishers (16)

Victoria W. Dykstra, Teena Willoughby & Angela D. Evans. (2023) A Latent Profile Analysis of Lie-Telling to Parents and Friends during Adolescence. Journal of Youth and Adolescence.
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Victoria W. Dykstra, Vanessa M. Turchio, Teena Willoughby & Angela D. Evans. (2023) Longitudinal associations between impulsivity and lie‐telling in childhood and adolescence. Developmental Science 26:4.
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Donia Tong, Ipek Isik & Victoria Talwar. (2023) A cross-cultural comparison of the relation between children’s moral standards of honesty and their lie-telling behavior. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 231, pages 105665.
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David M. Markowitz, Jeffrey T. Hancock, Michael T. Woodworth & Maxwell Ely. (2023) Contextual considerations for deception production and detection in forensic interviews. Frontiers in Psychology 14.
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David M. Markowitz. (2022) Toward a Deeper Understanding of Prolific Lying: Building a Profile of Situation-Level and Individual-Level Characteristics. Communication Research 50:1, pages 80-105.
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Donia Tong & Victoria Talwar. (2021) Understanding the development of honesty in children through the domains‐of‐socialization approach . Infant and Child Development 30:6.
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Victoria W. Dykstra, Teena Willoughby & Angela D. Evans. (2020) Lying to friends: Examining lie‐telling, friendship quality, and depressive symptoms over time during late childhood and adolescence. Journal of Adolescence 84:1, pages 123-135.
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Iulia BUTEANIonuț MONELaura VISU-PETRAAdrian OPRE. (2020) Predictors of Individual Differences in Lie Acceptability in Adolescence: Exploring the Influence of Social Desirability, Callous Unemotional Traits and Somatization. Journal of Evidence-Based Psychotherapies 20:2, pages 51-66.
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Victoria W. Dykstra, Teena Willoughby & Angela D. Evans. (2020) A Longitudinal Examination of the Relation Between Lie-Telling, Secrecy, Parent–Child Relationship Quality, and Depressive Symptoms in Late-Childhood and Adolescence. Journal of Youth and Adolescence 49:2, pages 438-448.
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Victoria W. Dykstra, Teena Willoughby & Angela D. Evans. (2019) Perceptions of Dishonesty: Understanding Parents’ Reports of and Influence on Children and Adolescents’ Lie-Telling. Journal of Youth and Adolescence 49:1, pages 49-59.
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John O. Greene, Kylie L. Geiman & Douglas E. Pruim. 2019. The Palgrave Handbook of Deceptive Communication. The Palgrave Handbook of Deceptive Communication 129 143 .
Madeleine H. Redlick & Anita L. Vangelisti. (2018) Affection, Deception, and Evolution: Deceptive Affectionate Messages as Mate Retention Behaviors. Evolutionary Psychology 16:1, pages 147470491775385.
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Glynis Bogaard, Ewout H. Meijer, Aldert Vrij & Harald Merckelbach. (2016) Strong, but Wrong: Lay People’s and Police Officers’ Beliefs about Verbal and Nonverbal Cues to Deception. PLOS ONE 11:6, pages e0156615.
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Evelyne Debey, Maarten De Schryver, Gordon D. Logan, Kristina Suchotzki & Bruno Verschuere. (2015) From junior to senior Pinocchio: A cross-sectional lifespan investigation of deception. Acta Psychologica 160, pages 58-68.
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Timothy R. Levine. (2014) Truth-Default Theory (TDT). Journal of Language and Social Psychology 33:4, pages 378-392.
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Steven A. McCornack, Kelly Morrison, Jihyun Esther Paik, Amy M. Wisner & Xun Zhu. (2014) Information Manipulation Theory 2. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 33:4, pages 348-377.
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