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Promises and lies: can observers detect deception in written messages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2025

Jingnan Chen*
Affiliation:
Economics Department, Business School, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
Daniel Houser*
Affiliation:
Interdisciplinary Center for Economic Science, George Mason University, Fairfax, USA
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Abstract

We design a laboratory experiment to examine predictions of trustworthiness in a novel three-person trust game. We investigate whether and why observers of the game can predict the trustworthiness of hand-written communications. Observers report their perception of the trustworthiness of messages, and make predictions about the senders’ behavior. Using observers’ decisions, we are able to classify messages as “promises” or “empty talk.” Drawing from substantial previous research, we hypothesize that certain factors influence whether a sender is likely to honor a message and/or whether an observer perceives the message as likely to behonored: the mention of money; the use of encompassing words; and message length. We find that observers have more trust in longer messages and “promises”; promises that mention money are significantly more likely to be broken; and observers trust equally in promises that do and do not mention money. Overall, observers perform slightly better than chance at predicting whether a message will be honored. We attribute this result to observers’ ability to distinguish promises from empty talk, and to trust promises more than empty talk. However, within each of these two categories, observers are unable to discern between messages that senders will honor from those that they will not.

Information

Type
Original Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2016
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Fig. 1 The Mistress Game

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Fig. 2 The single message communication phase

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Fig. 3 The double message communication phase

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Fig. 4 Role B decisions

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Table 1 Message evaluation results

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Table 2 Comparison of the messages from single and double environment

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Table 3 Tobit regression of message classification on perceived cues

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Table 4 Tobit regression of perceived cues for trustworthiness using all messages

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Table 5 Actual cues predicting senders’ behavior using all messages

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Table 6 Tobit regression of perceived cues and trust using promises

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Table 7 Actual cues for promises

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Table 8 Actual cues versus perceived cues for promises

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Table 9 Predictions by receivers: summary statistics

Supplementary material: File

Chen and Houser supplementary material

Chen and Houser supplementary material
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