the participant benefited, suggesting self-interest was necessary for dishonesty to escalate. This study is the first empirical evidence that dishonest behavior escalates when it's repeated, when all else is held constant, lead author Neil Garrett, a cognitive neuroscientist at U.C.L., told repo
Date: Oct 24, 2016
Category: Health
Source: Google
Slippery slope: Study finds little lies lead to bigger ones
You can think of this as a slippery slope with what begins as small acts of dishonesty escalating to much larger ones, said study lead author Neil Garrett , now a neuroscience researcher at Princeton University. It highlights the potential dangers of engaging in small acts of dishonesty on a regu
Date: Oct 24, 2016
Category: Health
Source: Google
Neuroscientists show how tiny fibs snowball into big lies
I think this studys the first empirical evidence that dishonest behavior escalates when its repeated, when all else is held constant, and it ties this phenomenon to emotional adaptation, study lead author Neil Garrett of University College London said. The same mechanism may well underlie all s
Date: Oct 24, 2016
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Telling a lie makes way for the brain to keep lying
This study is the first empirical evidence that dishonest behavior escalates when its repeated, when all else is held constant, lead author Neil Garrett, a cognitive neuroscientist at U.C.L., told reporters.
Date: Oct 24, 2016
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
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