“…Indeed, while scholars have pointed out the prevalence of elements related to violence and lies in folktales (Meehan, 1994;Victor, 1990;Haar, 2005;Chima and Helen, 2015;Alcantud-Diaz, 2010, few have offered a rigorous statistical method to understand the interactions between these elements and their religio-cultural contexts. Thus, the present study's research method adds to the wave of studies on computational folkloristics, which currently emphasize the digitization of resources, the classification of folklore, and the necessary algorithms for data structure development rather than the statistical analysis of behavioral patterns in folktales (Abello et al, 2012;Tangherlini, 2013;Nguyen et al, 2013;Dogra, 2018;Tehrani and d'Huy, 2017). Moreover, the scope of the present research differs from the largely Euro-centric research projects (Nguyen et al, 2013;Bortolini et al, 2017a, b;d'Huy et al, 2017;Nikolić and Bakarić, 2016), as it contributes to the wave of scholarship on non-WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) societies by shedding light on the littleknown behavioral variability and contradictions in the folklore of a developing Asian country (Henrich et al, 2010).…”