Lie construction affects information storage under high memory load condition

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Abstract

Previous studies indicate that lying consumes cognitive resources, especially working memory (WM) resources. Considering the dual functions that WM might play in lying: holding the truth-related information and turning the truth into lies, the present study examined the relationship between the information storage and processing in the lie construction. To achieve that goal, a deception task based on the old/new recognition paradigm was designed, which could manipulate two levels of WM load (low-load task using 4 items and high-load task using 6 items) during the deception process. The analyses based on the amplitude of the contralateral delay activity (CDA), a proved index of the number of representations being held in WM, showed that the CDA amplitude was lower in the deception process than that in the truth telling process under the high-load condition. In contrast, under the low-load condition, no CDA difference was found between the deception and truth telling processes. Therefore, we deduced that the lie construction and information storage compete for WM resources; when the available WM resources cannot meet this cognitive demand, the WM resources occupied by the information storage would be consumed by the lie construction.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Experimental procedure used in the current study. A) Eight shapes in the stimulus bank. B) The sequence of events in both low-load and high-load trial: in this low-load task, the participants should lie to the stimulus in the left hemifield; in this high-load task, the participants should be honest to the stimulus in the right hemifield.
  • Fig 2. Task performance in this study. Error bar shows one standard error of the mean. **: p < .01; *: p < .05.
  • Table 1. The results of the WM capacity computation.
  • Fig 3. The mean CDA (Contralateral minus Ipsilateral) results for the task conditions. Since the result patterns were similar across the analyzed five electrode pairs, so the figure showed the results on the Fz as the representative. The arrow shows the time when the test array presented, and the time window of average CDA amplitude is also marked.
  • Fig 4. The interaction between the response type and memory load in the CDA analysis. Error bar shows one standard error of the mean.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Liu, Y., Wang, C., Jiang, H., He, H., & Chen, F. (2017). Lie construction affects information storage under high memory load condition. PLoS ONE, 12(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181007

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