It's so much easier to be deceitful when you don't have to actually
look into somebody's eyes, right? That's what a study conducted by the
University of British Columbia figured out. Here's how it was done: 170 students were brought in to perform mock stock transactions using one of four methods -- face-to-face, text, video or audio. Brokers were promised higher monetary compensation for more stock sales, while buyers were told their reward would all depend on the value of the stock. The brokers were given inside information that the stock was rigged to lose half of its value, while buyers were only told after the transaction was over and were asked to report on whether or not the brokers were deceitful when selling this stock to them. The study analyzed which method produced the most lies and found that buyers who used texts were much more likely to report deception, while video chatting was the least. Skeptical about your significant other's
text that says they're just at their friend's house or washing their hair? See if you can Skype them instead. Check out the full results of the study after the break.
Continue reading People more likely to lie when texting, according to UBC research
People more likely to lie when texting, according to UBC research originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Dec 2011 08:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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