ABSTRACT

The understanding of early deception is important for both theoretical and practical purposes. Children's deceptive behaviors provide a window into their models and theories of mind. On a practical level, childhood deception poses challenges for the legal system as well as parents and schools.

In this volume, contributors from diverse areas of psychology -- social, cognitive, and developmental -- as well as philosophy and law examine the determinants of deception among preschoolers. In addition to a wealth of new empirical findings dealing with gender, motivation, and context in children's use of deception, evidence is provided for recursivity of awareness in children as young as three years of age. With chapters and commentaries written by leading scholars in the United States, England, and Australia, this book reflects a growing concern with ecological validity in developmental studies and may prompt rethinking of traditional models of mind based exclusively on data from laboratory experiments.

chapter |9 pages

“I Know that You Know that I know that You Broke the Toy”

A Brief Report of Recursive Awareness Among 3-Year-Olds

chapter |16 pages

Believing and Deceiving

Steps to Becoming a Good Liar

chapter |6 pages

Sex, Lies, and Smiling Faces

A Brief Report on Gender Differences in 3-Year-Olds' Deceptions

chapter |19 pages

Adults' Liability for Children's “Lie-Ability”

Can Adults Coach Children to Lie Successfully?

chapter |21 pages

Children's Lying and Truthfulness

Implications for Children's Testimony

chapter |20 pages

Commentary

On the Structure of Lies and Deception Experiments

chapter |21 pages

Commentary

The Occasions of Perjury