You’re texting with a friend. The back and forth is fast and furious.
Until…there’s an awkwardly long pause. You might think, aw, they just
got another call, or had to get back to their dinner, whatever. But
maybe…they’re about to lie.
At least that was one conclusion from an experiment published in a journal called ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems.
Scientists had 100 participants converse via online text with a
specially developed computer program. The computer asked each
participant 30 questions. And the participants were instructed to lie in
half the responses. The researchers found that the lies took 10 percent
longer to write, were shorter and were edited more than the truthful
messages.
How can you tell if someone is heavily editing a text? Newer smartphones
let you know when the other person is typing. A lot of starting and
stopping could mean the texter is carefully constructing a response that
might not hold up in a court of law.
Bottom line: dishonest texts take longer on average to write—but it’s
also possible your friend may be making an honest attempt to fix those
pesky incorrect auto-corrects.
—Christie Nicholson