2018
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3243973
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It's Not a Lie If You Believe It: Lying and Belief Distortion Under Norm-Uncertainty

Cristina Bicchieri,
Eugen Dimant

Abstract: We explore the relationship between norm-uncertainty and lying. Lies are ubiquitous, and people often lie for their own benefit or for the benefit of others. Research in environments in which social norms are clearly defined and communicated finds that social norms influence personal decisions, even when they are not in our own self-interest. We deviate from this approach and study lying under norm uncertainty with scope for opportunistic interpretation of the norm. We introduce variation along three dimension… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…In another experiment, Bicchieri et al (2019b) we explore the relationship between norm-uncertainty and lying. Our goal was to understand how individuals use information (empirical or normative) to form beliefs about whether a norm applies and how belief formation is affected by the source of the uncertainty and awareness of the possibility of subsequent lying.…”
Section: Self-serving Belief Distortion: How We Process Norm-uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…In another experiment, Bicchieri et al (2019b) we explore the relationship between norm-uncertainty and lying. Our goal was to understand how individuals use information (empirical or normative) to form beliefs about whether a norm applies and how belief formation is affected by the source of the uncertainty and awareness of the possibility of subsequent lying.…”
Section: Self-serving Belief Distortion: How We Process Norm-uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Publicizing any behavior, whether good or bad, may lead the receiver to conclude that the behavior is also approved of. In this case empirical information leads to parallel normative conclusions (Eriksson et al, 2015;Lindström et al, 2018;Bicchieri et al, 2019b). Conversely, when getting normative information about common approval of good behavior, one may not infer that most people behave in the appropriate way.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Our findings suggest that supporting the required behavior with normative information can serve such a purpose. In contrast, empirical information may not help and may even be abused for self-serving purposes (Bicchieri and Dimant, 2018). In effect, our results raise concerns about the combination of punishment and empirical information, which is part of the recent wave of social norm nudging (i.e., Hallsworth et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…By signaling a norm violation, punishment increases the psychological cost of violation, thus enforcing compliance. However, when an enforced behavior is only supported by empirical information and noncompliance is perceived simply as a deviation from what others do, norms-signaling punishment may be weakened and even lead to transgression (see Schultz et al, 2007;Bicchieri and Dimant, 2018). Thus, we hypothesize that punishment is more effective when an enforced behavior is presented as the right course of action rather than what others do or would do.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%