Publication | Open Access
Young children's emerging ability to make false statements.
90
Citations
26
References
2011
Year
False StatementsNecessary ComponentSocial PsychologyLanguage DevelopmentEducationCognitionEarly Childhood EducationPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyCognitive ConstructionCognitive DevelopmentSocial ReasoningSocial-emotional DevelopmentDevelopmental DisorderChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceEarly Childhood DevelopmentHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyChild DevelopmentAdolescent CognitionYoung ChildrenDeception DetectionCognitive Psychology
This study examined the origins of children's ability to make consciously false statements, a necessary component of lying. Children 2 to 5 years of age were rewarded for claiming that they saw a picture of a bird when viewing pictures of fish. They were asked outcome questions ("Do you win/lose?"), recognition questions ("Do you have a bird/fish?"), and recall questions ("What do you have?"), which were hypothesized to vary in difficulty depending on the need for consciousness of falsity (less for outcome questions) and self-generation of an appropriate response (more for recall questions). The youngest children (2½ to 3½ years old) were above chance on outcome questions, but it was not until age 3½ that children performed above chance on recognition questions or were capable of maintaining false claims across question types. Findings have implications for understanding the emergence of deception in young children.
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