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Tania Valle; Annamaria Krizovenska; Josué García-Arch; Maria Teresa Bajo; Lluís Fuentemilla – Cognitive Science, 2025
Societal structures and memory organization models share network-like features, offering insights into how information spreads and shapes collective memories. In this study, we manipulated the structure of lab-created community networks during a computer-mediated recall task using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm to test the spreading…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Memory, Accuracy, Deception
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Sophie Bridgers; Kiera Parece; Ibuki Iwasaki; Annalisa Broski; Laura Schulz; Tomer Ullman – Child Development, 2025
What do children do when they do not want to obey but cannot afford to disobey? Might they, like adults, feign misunderstanding and seek out loopholes? Across four studies (N = 723; 44% female; USA; majority White; data collected 2020-2023), we find that loophole behavior emerges around ages 5 to 6 (Study 1, 3-18 years), that children think…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Compliance (Psychology), Deception, Conflict
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Sharon Leal; Aldert Vrij; Haneen Deeb; Ronald P. Fisher – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2024
People sometimes lie by omitting information. The information lie tellers then report could be entirely truthful. We examined whether the truthful information that lie tellers report in omission lies contains verbal cues indicating that the person is lying. We made a distinction between (i) essential information (events surrounding the omission)…
Descriptors: Deception, Credibility, Verbal Communication, Cues
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Gregg Twietmeyer – International Journal of Kinesiology in Higher Education, 2025
The reproducibility crisis in the sciences is now well established. Curiously, only sporadic attention has been paid to it in kinesiology. This is a mistake. The scientific research produced in kinesiology is not exempt from the causes of the crisis. These causes include human, statistical and philosophical limitations inherent to the scientific…
Descriptors: Kinesiology, Scientific Research, Replication (Evaluation), Research Problems
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John S. Seiter – Communication Teacher, 2025
This activity helps students examine key elements of truth-default theory. Specifically, by participating in a deception detection game, which secretly prompts different teams to be more or less suspicious, students learn that people's tendency to be "truth biased" leads to lower accuracy when judging actual lies and higher accuracy when…
Descriptors: Bias, Deception, Identification, Ethics
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Karen Paullet; Jamie Pinchot; Evan Kinney; Tyler Stewart – Information Systems Education Journal, 2025
Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT are now in widespread use and are often utilized by students to help in creating writing assignments intended to be written entirely by the student. This has spurred the need for AI detection tools such as GPTZero. This study sought to determine the accuracy of GPTZero's AI detection in identifying whether…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Writing Assignments, Deception, Program Effectiveness
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Ali, Mazurina Mohd; Zaharon, Nur Farhana Mohd – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2024
Internet users are becoming ignorant with their data and the transparency of information due to the nature of high-speed internet today. Regrettably, internet users are deceived by engineering tactics performed by highly trained people, namely cybercriminals. Thus, in order to combat phishing attacks, internet users should be educated on security…
Descriptors: Information Security, Governance, Data, Literature Reviews
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Viktoria Kainz; Justin Sulik; Sonja Utz; Torsten Enßlin – Cognitive Science, 2025
A large part of how people learn about their shared world is via social information. However, in complex modern information ecosystems, it can be challenging to identify deception or filter out misinformation. This challenge is exacerbated by the existence of a dual-learning problem whereby: (1) people draw inferences about the world, given new…
Descriptors: Social Influences, Cognitive Processes, Credibility, Information Sources
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Warmelink, Lara; O'Connell, Felicity – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Construal level theory states that future events that are nearer in the future and events that are more likely to happen have lower construal levels, and therefore have less detail, than events that are further away and/or less likely to happen. Consistent with this theory, the number of details in a statement can be a moderately good cue to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Intention, Deception, Cues
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Chang, Shun-Chuan; Chang, Keng Lun – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2023
Machine learning has evolved and expanded as an interdisciplinary research method for educational sciences. However, cheating detection of test collusion among multiple examinees or sets of examinees with unusual answer patterns using machine learning techniques has remained relatively unexplored. This study investigates collusion on…
Descriptors: Cheating, Identification, Artificial Intelligence, Cooperation
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Samantha Mann; Aldert Vrij; Haneen Deeb – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2024
We examined the efficacy of a Model Statement to detect opinion lies. A total of 93 participants discussed their opinion about the recent strikes on two occasions, 1 week apart. In one interview they told the truth and in the other interview they lied. Each interview consisted of two phases. In Phase 1 they discussed their alleged opinion (truth…
Descriptors: Opinions, Accuracy, Deception, Credibility
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Daniel E. O'Donnell; Alijah A. Forbes; Michelle C. Huffman; Kathryn Porter; Michelle Miller – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2024
The current study examined verbal cues of veracity and deception in 911 calls reporting homicides or suicides of another person. Specifically, the current study compared differences in the presence/absence and number of potential verbal indicators between a sample of deceptive callers who concealed their role in causing the person's death and…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Death, Suicide, Credibility
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James Bonnamy; Bethany Carr; Michelle D. Lazarus; Clifford Connell – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
Validity is a key element of many forms of research--particularly surveys, which are often used in health professions education research. A survey must accurately measure what it is intended to measure to be considered valid. This is becoming increasingly difficult in the age of artificial intelligence (AI), where "bots" (short for…
Descriptors: Deception, Online Surveys, Risk Management, Validity
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Margit Sommersguter-Reichmann; Gerhard Reichmann – Policy Reviews in Higher Education, 2025
Corruption in higher education, particularly institutional corruption, is increasingly recognised as a critical issue, though its manifestations remain underexplored. This study uses the case of Austrian public universities to explore how indicator-based funding and the employment arrangements adopted by universities under the collective…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Deception, Public Colleges, Educational Finance
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Riesthuis, Paul; Otgaar, Henry; Hope, Lorraine; Mangiulli, Ivan – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
In the current experiment, we examined the effects of self-generated deceptive behavior on memory. Participants (n = 230) were randomly assigned to a "strong-incentive to cheat" or "weak-incentive to cheat" condition and played the adapted Sequential Dyadic Die-Rolling paradigm. Participants in the "strong-incentive to…
Descriptors: Incentives, Deception, Memory, Cheating
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