WASHINGTON: Children who are good at lying have better verbal working memory and thinking skills, a new study has found for the first time.
Researchers from the University of North Florida and the University of Sheffield, UK, have discovered that working memory helps children tell better lies.
“This research shows that thought processes, specifically verbal working memory, are important to complex social interactions, like lying, because the children needed to juggle multiple pieces of information while keeping the researcher’s perspective in mind,” said Dr Tracy Alloway, a UNF associate professor of psychology, one of the lead researchers of study.
A total of 137 children ages 6 to 7 years old participated in this study and had their verbal working memory tested.
They were then asked a series of trivia questions written on a card and were aware that the answers were written on the back of the card in different colours, along with a picture.
The researchers left the room and instructed the children not to look at the back of the card.
A hidden camera observed the children and showed who looked at the back of the card. When the researchers asked them the answer to a question, those who peeked gave the correct answer.







