Trusting People Make Better Lie Detectors

Posted by on Aug 13, 2010 | 4 Comments

There should be an image here!Trusting others may not make you a fool or a Pollyanna, according to a study in the current Social Psychological and Personality Science (published by SAGE). Instead it can be a sign that you’re smart.

Researchers asked study participants to watch taped job interviews of 2nd year MBA students. Interviewees were all told to do their best to get the job. Half of the interviewees were completely truthful; the other half told at least three significant lies to appear more attractive for the job. All interviewees were guaranteed $20 for making the job interview tape, and both the liars and truth-tellers hoped to receive an additional $20 if a supposed “lie detection expert” watched the tape and believed they were telling the truth.

Several days before the participants watched the tapes, they filled out a questionnaire that measured their trust in other people, with questions such as “Most people are basically honest,” and “Most people are basically good-natured and kind.” They then watched the videos, and rated the truthfulness and honesty of the interviewees.

People high in trust were more accurate at detecting the liars — the more people showed trust in others, the more able they were to distinguish a lie from the truth. The more faith in their fellow humans they had, the more they wanted to hire the honest interviewees and to avoid the lying ones. Contrary to the stereotype, people who were low in trust were more willing to hire liars and they were also less likely to be aware that they were liars.

“Although people seem to believe that low trusters are better lie detectors and less gullible than high trusters, these results suggest that the reverse is true,” write co-authors Nancy Carter and Mark Weber of the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto. “High trusters were better lie detectors than were low trusters; they also formed more appropriate impressions and hiring intentions.

“People who trust others are not pie-in-the-sky Pollyannas, their interpersonal accuracy may make them particularly good at hiring, recruitment, and identifying good friends and worthy business partners.”

[Photo above by MousyBoyWithGlasses / CC BY-ND 2.0]

Jim Gilden @ SAGE Publications

[awsbullet:David J. Lieberman]

  • http://ronknights.com/ Ron Knights

    I prefer to be around people I can trust.

    Quite often I can sense when someone is not telling the truth.

    Maybe it’s just their mannerisms or the words they use.

    Sometimes liars don’t really answer the question, but instead try to lead you astray with their responses.

    If I feel I can’t trust someone, I prefer not to associate with them.

  • Matt

    Could it be that people who are able to distinguish honesty from dishonesty in others tend not to be burned (making them more trusting), while those without the ability tend to get burned (and lose their original trust)?

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