157 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 28620940)
1. Young children discover how to deceive in 10 days: a microgenetic study.
Ding XP; Heyman GD; Fu G; Zhu B; Lee K
Dev Sci; 2018 May; 21(3):e12566. PubMed ID: 28620940
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
2. Learning to deceive has cognitive benefits.
Ding XP; Heyman GD; Sai L; Yuan F; Winkielman P; Fu G; Lee K
J Exp Child Psychol; 2018 Dec; 176():26-38. PubMed ID: 30076996
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
3. Give and take: A microgenetic study of preschoolers' deceptive and prosocial behavior in relation to their socio-cognitive development.
Seucan DT; Szekely-Copîndean RD; Ding XP; Visu-Petra L
Acta Psychol (Amst); 2022 Oct; 230():103714. PubMed ID: 36027708
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
4. Children's second-order lying: Young children can tell the truth to deceive.
Sai L; Ding XP; Gao X; Fu G
J Exp Child Psychol; 2018 Dec; 176():128-139. PubMed ID: 30149244
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
5. The honest truth about deception: Demographic, cognitive, and neural correlates of child repeated deceptive behavior.
Thijssen S; Wildeboer A; van IJzendoorn MH; Muetzel RL; Langeslag SJE; Jaddoe VWV; Verhulst FC; Tiemeier H; Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ; White T
J Exp Child Psychol; 2017 Oct; 162():225-241. PubMed ID: 28623779
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
6. Elementary school children's cheating behavior and its cognitive correlates.
Ding XP; Omrin DS; Evans AD; Fu G; Chen G; Lee K
J Exp Child Psychol; 2014 May; 121():85-95. PubMed ID: 24464240
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
7. Young children's willingness to deceive shows in-group bias only in specific social contexts.
De La Cerda C; Warnell KR
J Exp Child Psychol; 2020 Oct; 198():104906. PubMed ID: 32631614
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
8. Socio-cognitive correlates of primary school children's deceptive behavior toward peers in competitive settings.
Prodan N; Ding XP; Szekely-Copîndean RD; Tănăsescu A; Visu-Petra L
Acta Psychol (Amst); 2023 Oct; 240():104019. PubMed ID: 37734243
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
9. Truthful yet misleading: Elementary second-order deception in school-age children and its sociocognitive correlates.
Prodan N; Ding XP; Visu-Petra L
J Exp Child Psychol; 2024 Jan; 237():105759. PubMed ID: 37597452
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
10. A truth that's told with bad intent: an ERP study of deception.
Carrión RE; Keenan JP; Sebanz N
Cognition; 2010 Jan; 114(1):105-10. PubMed ID: 19836013
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
11. Deceptive behaviour in autism: A scoping review.
Bagnall R; Russell A; Brosnan M; Maras K
Autism; 2022 Feb; 26(2):293-307. PubMed ID: 34825581
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
12. Deception by young children following noncompliance.
Polak A; Harris PL
Dev Psychol; 1999 Mar; 35(2):561-8. PubMed ID: 10082026
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
13. The role of executive functions and theory of mind in children's prosocial lie-telling.
Williams S; Moore K; Crossman AM; Talwar V
J Exp Child Psychol; 2016 Jan; 141():256-66. PubMed ID: 26361741
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
14. Telling a truth to deceive: Examining executive control and reward-related processes underlying interpersonal deception.
Sai L; Wu H; Hu X; Fu G
Brain Cogn; 2018 Aug; 125():149-156. PubMed ID: 29990705
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
15. Stop in the name of lies: The cost of blocking the truth to deceive.
Aïte A; Houdé O; Borst G
Conscious Cogn; 2018 Oct; 65():141-151. PubMed ID: 30176515
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
16. Study of the theory of mind in normal aging: focus on the deception detection and its links with other cognitive functions.
Calso C; Besnard J; Allain P
Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn; 2020 May; 27(3):430-452. PubMed ID: 31188065
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
17. Young children's difficulty acknowledging false belief: realism and deception.
Saltmarsh R; Mitchell P
J Exp Child Psychol; 1998 Apr; 69(1):3-21. PubMed ID: 9584068
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
18. Verbal deception from late childhood to middle adolescence and its relation to executive functioning skills.
Evans AD; Lee K
Dev Psychol; 2011 Jul; 47(4):1108-16. PubMed ID: 21553958
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
19. Cheating in the name of others: Offering prosocial justifications promotes unethical behavior in young children.
Zhao L; Heyman GD; Chen L; Sun W; Zhang R; Lee K
J Exp Child Psychol; 2019 Jan; 177():187-196. PubMed ID: 30216777
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
20. Neural correlates of second-order verbal deception: a functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) study.
Ding XP; Sai L; Fu G; Liu J; Lee K
Neuroimage; 2014 Feb; 87():505-14. PubMed ID: 24161626
[TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]
[Next] [New Search]