2003
DOI: 10.1080/08824090309388819
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The relative impact of violation type and lie severity on judgments of message deceitfulness

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
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“…Violations of quantity are judged as less severe than violations of quality (Jacobs, Dawson, & Brashers, 1996;McCornack et al, 1992). This is confirmed in research on negotiation and judgment and decision making that has found that omissions are viewed as less deceptive and more socially acceptable than commissions (Ritov & Baron, 1990;Spranca, Minsk, & Baron, 1991;Tenbrunsel & Messick, 2004;Van Swol et al, 2012; for exception see, Levine, Asada, & Massi, 2003). For example, DeScioli, Christner, and Kurzban (2011) found participants were more likely to use omission to deceive than commission when their behavior had the potential to be punished because participants anticipated less severe punishments with omission.…”
Section: Communication Medium and Type Of Deceptionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Violations of quantity are judged as less severe than violations of quality (Jacobs, Dawson, & Brashers, 1996;McCornack et al, 1992). This is confirmed in research on negotiation and judgment and decision making that has found that omissions are viewed as less deceptive and more socially acceptable than commissions (Ritov & Baron, 1990;Spranca, Minsk, & Baron, 1991;Tenbrunsel & Messick, 2004;Van Swol et al, 2012; for exception see, Levine, Asada, & Massi, 2003). For example, DeScioli, Christner, and Kurzban (2011) found participants were more likely to use omission to deceive than commission when their behavior had the potential to be punished because participants anticipated less severe punishments with omission.…”
Section: Communication Medium and Type Of Deceptionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…A message is either intended to mislead another or it is not. Further, when judgments of deceit are scaled on a continuum, such judgments likely confound perceptions of deceptive intent, the proportion of truthful message content, confidence in judgment, and perceived lie severity (Levine, 2001;Levine, Asada, & Massi, 2003). [2] Readers might object to H6c on the grounds that it specifies a null hypothesis, and that null hypotheses cannot be adequately assessed with traditional null hypothesis significance testing.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Experimental research by Levine, Asada, and Lindsey (2003) suggests that the type of deceptive message communicated may impact whether people perceive it as constituting deception. Specifically, they found that false information (termed quality violations) was consistently perceived as deceptive.…”
Section: Deception and Deception Typementioning
confidence: 98%