• Promises found to reduce cheating in lar

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Aug 3 21:30:28 2020
    Promises found to reduce cheating in large study of adolescents

    Date:
    August 3, 2020
    Source:
    University of Plymouth
    Summary:
    New research has found that adolescents who promised to be truthful
    were less likely to 'cheat' than those who did not, even when they
    could not be found out.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The study, of 640 10 to 14-year-olds in India, was designed in a way that
    meant it was impossible to tell who had and had not kept their promise
    -- suggesting it is not just the fear of social retaliation that makes
    people stick to their word.


    ==========================================================================
    The team of researchers included two newly appointed members of the
    School of Psychology at the University of Plymouth, and the study is
    published in the Journal of Behavioral Decision Making.

    Cheating and dishonesty, even on a small scale, can undermine trust and
    lead to costs for others, and society at large. Cheating in academic
    settings is a problem worldwide. As of 2018, 20% of the world's
    adolescents -- about 250 million individuals -- lived in India and the country's highly competitive educational system means academic cheating
    is a concern. To the best of the research team's knowledge, there are
    no previous experimental studies into the effect of promises on cheating
    rates in Indian adolescents.

    The research used a series of experiments to test the effectiveness of
    inviting participants to promise to be truthful, with points that would
    later be converted into prizes as an incentive. For example, participants played a game in which they mentally chose a location in a box with 16
    dice, shook the box and recorded the number of the die falling in their
    chosen position. Prizes were proportional to their total reported scores
    across fifteen rounds. As the initial choice was private, opportunistic
    and unobservable switching to a higher scoring die was possible.

    Before the task, the adolescents received a choice to promise to be
    truthful or not. To make promising attractive for participants, those
    who did so received extra points. This gave even potentially dishonest participants an incentive to choose to promise. Control groups of
    participants could choose between the same incentives but did not have
    to promise.

    The authors were able to measure the degree of dishonesty by comparing participants' reported results to what would be statistically expected.

    Compared to control groups, promises in the study systematically lowered cheating rates, and the authors conclude that they could be a simple
    tool to reduce dishonest behaviour.

    The study's first author, Dr Patricia Kanngiesser, who is an Associate Professor in Psychology at the University, commented: "Promises are what
    we call 'speech acts' and create commitments by merely saying specific
    words. So one would think that they have very little binding power. In contrast, research has shown over and over again that many people do
    keep their word, even at a personal cost.

    "This study provides more evidence of that, and suggests promises could
    be a powerful way of encouraging and sustaining honest behaviour in an
    academic context.

    "The study also exemplifies the benefits of global cooperation and diverse perspectives in research: we were conducting online studies with adults on promise keeping when our collaborator, Dr Jahnavi Sunderarajan, suggested applying this in academic contexts in India, where there is a lot of competition and educators are worried about cheating, but few empirical
    studies exist. As a result we have been able to expand our research into
    a new area and make progress towards addressing an important problem."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Plymouth. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Patricia Kanngiesser, Jahnavi Sunderarajan, Jan K. Woike. Keeping
    them
    honest: Promises reduce cheating in adolescents. Journal of
    Behavioral Decision Making, 2020; DOI: 10.1002/bdm.2203 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200803105244.htm

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