On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty

Contrary to the self-interestedness assumption, numerous economic studies have documented that people are intrinsically honest. However, little is known about this trait's developmental origin. This study examines whether and the extent to which children in early childhood incur the intrinsic l...

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Main Authors: He, Tai-Sen, Qin, Lili
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147070
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1470702023-03-05T15:30:57Z On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty He, Tai-Sen Qin, Lili School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Economic theory Children Deception Contrary to the self-interestedness assumption, numerous economic studies have documented that people are intrinsically honest. However, little is known about this trait's developmental origin. This study examines whether and the extent to which children in early childhood incur the intrinsic lying cost. We modified the commonly used coin-flip task into a child-friendly ball-drawing task with 10 trials and conducted the experiment with 225 child participants aged three to eight years old. We found that-although young children, on average, told two lies in the task (an average winning rate of 71%)-they lied significantly less than the maximum level (i.e., lying 100% of the time). The pattern was largely similar across gender and the age range studied. Furthermore, our child subjects' propensity to lie dropped by approximately 9% when they were randomly assigned to the treatment condition with an increased "perceived" intrinsic cost of lying. Overall, our results align with the innate morality hypothesis: young children, as young as three years old, are willing to give up pecuniary rewards in order to remain honest. Ministry of Education (MOE) Published version He acknowledges financial support from the Ministry of Education of Singapore (MOE Academic Research Fund Tier 1 RG57/14). 2021-03-24T05:30:50Z 2021-03-24T05:30:50Z 2020 Journal Article He, T. & Qin, L. (2020). On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty. PloS One, 15(9). https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238241 1932-6203 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147070 10.1371/journal.pone.0238241 32911505 2-s2.0-85090817297 9 15 en RG57/14 PloS One © 2020 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Economic theory
Children
Deception
spellingShingle Social sciences::Economic theory
Children
Deception
He, Tai-Sen
Qin, Lili
On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
description Contrary to the self-interestedness assumption, numerous economic studies have documented that people are intrinsically honest. However, little is known about this trait's developmental origin. This study examines whether and the extent to which children in early childhood incur the intrinsic lying cost. We modified the commonly used coin-flip task into a child-friendly ball-drawing task with 10 trials and conducted the experiment with 225 child participants aged three to eight years old. We found that-although young children, on average, told two lies in the task (an average winning rate of 71%)-they lied significantly less than the maximum level (i.e., lying 100% of the time). The pattern was largely similar across gender and the age range studied. Furthermore, our child subjects' propensity to lie dropped by approximately 9% when they were randomly assigned to the treatment condition with an increased "perceived" intrinsic cost of lying. Overall, our results align with the innate morality hypothesis: young children, as young as three years old, are willing to give up pecuniary rewards in order to remain honest.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
He, Tai-Sen
Qin, Lili
format Article
author He, Tai-Sen
Qin, Lili
author_sort He, Tai-Sen
title On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
title_short On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
title_full On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
title_fullStr On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
title_full_unstemmed On the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
title_sort on the developmental origin of intrinsic honesty
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147070
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