Bagnall Ralph, Russell Ailsa, Brosnan Mark, Maras Katie
University of Bath, UK.
Autism. 2024 Mar;28(3):718-731. doi: 10.1177/13623613231183911. Epub 2023 Aug 12.
Differences in social communication and understanding others' mental states may mean that autistic adults are less likely to deceive others than non-autistic individuals. We investigated whether autistic and non-autistic adults differ in their inclination to lie and which psychological factors are involved in the inclination to lie. We found that autistic and non-autistic groups reported a similar inclination to lie, and the extent to which participants viewed lying as acceptable helped to explain their inclination to deceive others. However, the other underlying psychological factors associated with deception inclination differed between autistic and non-autistic groups. Autistic adults' belief about their ability to lie and also how quickly they could lie helped to explain whether they were more or less inclined to lie. For non-autistic adults, their memory and ability to understand others' mental states helped to explain their lie inclination. We discuss these findings and recommend areas for future research.
社交沟通以及理解他人心理状态方面的差异可能意味着,与非自闭症成年人相比,自闭症成年人欺骗他人的可能性较小。我们调查了自闭症和非自闭症成年人在说谎倾向上是否存在差异,以及说谎倾向涉及哪些心理因素。我们发现,自闭症组和非自闭症组报告的说谎倾向相似,参与者认为说谎可接受的程度有助于解释他们欺骗他人的倾向。然而,自闭症组和非自闭症组之间,与欺骗倾向相关的其他潜在心理因素有所不同。自闭症成年人对自己说谎能力的信念以及他们说谎的速度有助于解释他们说谎倾向的强弱。对于非自闭症成年人来说,他们的记忆力和理解他人心理状态的能力有助于解释他们的说谎倾向。我们讨论了这些发现,并推荐了未来研究的方向。