The path of dishonesty: identification of mental processes with electrical neuroimaging

Author:

Globig Laura K123ORCID,Gianotti Lorena R R1ORCID,Ponsi Giorgia145ORCID,Koenig Thomas6ORCID,Dahinden Franziska M1ORCID,Knoch Daria1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Psychology, University of Bern Department of Social Neuroscience and Social Psychology, , Bern 3012 , Switzerland

2. University College London Affective Brain Lab, Department of Experimental Psychology, , London, WC1H 0AP , United Kingdom

3. University College London The Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research, , London, WC1H 0AP , United Kingdom

4. Italian Institute of Technology, Sapienza University of Rome and CLN2S@Sapienza Department of Psychology, , Rome 00185 , Italy

5. IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation , Rome 00170 , Italy

6. University Hospital of Psychiatry, University of Bern Translational Research Center, , Bern 3012 , Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Much research finds that lying takes longer than truth-telling. Yet, the source of this response time difference remains elusive. Here, we assessed the spatiotemporal evolution of electrical brain activity during honesty and dishonesty in 150 participants using a sophisticated electrical neuroimaging approach—the microstate approach. This uniquely positioned us to identify and contrast the entire chain of mental processes involved during honesty and dishonesty. Specifically, we find that the response time difference is the result of an additional late-occurring mental process, unique to dishonest decisions, interrupting the antecedent mental processing. We suggest that this process inhibits the activation of the truth, thus permitting the execution of the lie. These results advance our understanding of dishonesty and clarify existing theories about the role of increased cognitive load. More broadly, we demonstrate the vast potential of our approach to illuminate the temporal organization of mental processes involved in decision-making.

Funder

Typhaine Foundation awarded to Daria Knoch

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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