
Children with good memories ‘tell better porkies’
20 June 2015
From the section Health
It wasn’t me…. honestly
Children who have a good memory are better at telling lies, say child psychology researchers.
They tested six and seven-year-olds who were given an opportunity to cheat in a trivia game and then lie about their actions.
Children who were good liars performed better in tests of verbal memory – the number of words they could remember.
This means they are good at juggling lots of information, even if they do tell the odd fib.
Writing in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, researchers from the Universities of North Florida, Sheffield and Stirling, recruited 114 children from four British schools for their experiment.
It’s interesting to know why some children are able to tell more porkies than othersDr Elena Hoicka, University of Sheffield
Using hidden cameras during a question-and-answer game, they were able to identify the children who peeked at the answer to a fictitious question, even though they were told not to.
Good liar?
A potentially surprising finding (for parents) is that only a quarter of the children cheated by looking at the answer.
Further questioning allowed the researchers to work out who was a good liar or a bad liar.
They were particularly interested in children’s ability to maintain a good cover story for their lie.
In separate memory tests, the good liars showed they had a better working memory for words – but they didn’t show any evidence of being better at remembering pictures (visuo-spatial memory).
The researchers said this was because lying involves keeping track of lots of verbal information, whereas keeping track of images is less important.
Dr Elena Hoicka, a developmental psychologist from the University of Sheffield, said there was an upside to having a child who fibs. …read more
Source:: BBC UK