True and False Intentions: A Mental Representational Approach
Abstract
The study of true and false intentions is a specific case of deception-detection research. The focus
is on how to discriminate between lies and truths about future behavior, as opposed to previous
deception research that focused almost exclusively on past behavior. The societal value
of this research is great, since many legal settings demand that practitioners make credibility
judgments of intentions. Here, the focus is specifically on the mental representations of lies and
truths. The current thesis proposes and experimentally tests a theoretical model that suggests
differences in the mental representation and communication of true and false intentions. It is
based on research showing that psychologically distant tasks (e.g., unlikely tasks) are more abstractly
represented than psychologically proximal tasks (e.g., likely tasks). The purpose of this
model is to help provide powerful predictions about how to differentiate between true and false
intentions (e.g., generate novel cues to deceit) and to investigate the possibilities to apply construal
level theory to deception contexts. In brief, the model proposes that false intentions
should be more abstractly represented than true intentions since they concern unlikely rather
than likely future tasks. This difference should in turn be mirrored in language use. Four studies
tested this. In Study I, participants were asked either to perform or not to perform (but to claim
to perform in all cases) simple future tasks while construal level of the tasks was measured, using
a behavior segmentation task (Exp. 1), and participants’ preference for abstract/concrete
descriptions of the tasks (Exp. 2). Failing to support the prediction, liars’ and truth tellers’ construal
levels of the task did not differ. Study II again tested the prediction that false intentions
are more abstractly represented than true intentions. Schema consistency (schema-consistent
vs. schema-inconsistent tasks) was added as a manipulated factor to the tests in Study I. It was
predicted that truth tellers would represent the future task, particularly for the schema-inconsistent
task, in more concrete terms. Again, no between-group differences were found in level
of construal of the task. A meta-analysis across the three experiments in Studies I and II showed
an average effect size close to zero (Hedges’ g = 0.02). In Study III, it was tested whether false
statements of intentions are more abstractly phrased than true statements of intentions. A computerized
content analysis of over 6,000 statements of true and false intentions—using two established
measures of linguistic abstraction—revealed no support for the predicted difference.
In Study IV, two close replication experiments were conducted on the CLT finding at the core
of the proposed construal level of intention (CLINT) model: that unlikely future events are
more abstractly construed than likely ones. Both attempts failed to replicate this finding. In
summary, the results of the thesis lend no support to the prediction that false intentions are
represented at a higher, more abstract construal level than true intentions. A possible explanation
of the null findings is that the basic CLT assumption may not hold true. The thesis contributes
to the burgeoning field of true and false intentions. It also adds to the research field of CLT.
It makes a particularly valuable addition to the small number of studies investigating the effect
of the subjective likelihood of future tasks on their construal level.
Parts of work
Calderon, S., Mac Giolla, E., Granhag, P. A., & Ask, K. (2017). Do true
and false intentions differ in level of abstraction? A test of construal level
theory in deception contexts. Frontiers in Psychology, 8(2037).
::doi::10.3389/fpsyg.2017.02037 Calderon, S., Mac Giolla, E., Ask, K., & Granhag, P. A. (2019). The mental
representation of true and false intentions: A comparison of schema-consistent
and schema-inconsistent tasks. Manuscript under review. Calderon, S., Mac Giolla, E., Luke, T. J., Warmelink, L., Ask, K., & Granhag,
P. A., & Vrij, A. (2019). Linguistic concreteness of statements of true
and false intentions: A Mega-Analysis. Manuscript submitted for publication. Calderon, S., Mac Giolla, E., Ask, K., & Granhag, P. A. (2019). Subjective
probability and the construal level of future events: A replication study of
Wakslak, Trope, Liberman, and Alony (2006). Manuscript submitted for
publication.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Psychology ; Psykologiska institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 17 maj 2019, kl. 10.00, sal F1, Psykologiska institutionen, Haraldsgatan 1, Göteborg
Date of defence
2019-05-17
sofia.calderon@psy.gu.se
Date
2019-04-25Author
Calderon, Sofia
Keywords
deception
true and false intentions
construal level theory
mental representation
abstraction
action identification theory
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-438-4
978-91-7833-439-1
ISSN
1101-718X
Series/Report no.
Doctoral Dissertation
Language
eng