Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Politicians lie, so do I

Celse, J; Chang, K

Authors

J Celse

K Chang



Abstract

This research analyzed whether political leaders make people lie via priming experiments. Priming is a non-conscious and implicit memory effect in which exposure to one stimulus affects the response to another stimulus. Following priming theories, we proposed an innovative concept that people who perceive leaders to be dishonest (such as liar) are likely to lie themselves. We designed three experiments to analyze and critically discussed the potential influence of prime effect on lying behavior, through the prime effect of French political leaders (inc. general politicians, presidents and parties). Experiment 1 discovered that participants with non-politician-prime were less likely to lie (compared to politician-prime). Experiment 2A discovered that, compared to Hollande-prime, Sarkozy-prime led to lying behavior both in gravity (i.e. bigger lies) and frequency (i.e. lying more frequently). Experiment 2B discovered that Republicans-prime yielded an impact on more lying behavior, and Sarkozy-prime made such impact even stronger. Overall, the research findings suggest that lying can be triggered by external influencers such as leaders, presidents and politicians in the organizations. Our findings have provided valuable insights to organizational leaders and managers in their personnel management practice, especially in the intervention of lying behavior. Our findings also have offered new insights to explain non-conscious lying behavior.

Citation

Celse, J., & Chang, K. (2019). Politicians lie, so do I. Psychological Research, 83, 1311-1325. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-017-0954-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 23, 2017
Online Publication Date Nov 30, 2017
Publication Date Sep 1, 2019
Deposit Date Nov 23, 2017
Publicly Available Date Dec 1, 2017
Journal Psychological Research
Print ISSN 0340-0727
Publisher Springer Verlag
Volume 83
Pages 1311-1325
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-017-0954-7
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00426-017-0954-7
Related Public URLs https://link.springer.com/journal/426

Files





Downloadable Citations