Abstract
Young children's lie-telling behavior is associated with their theory of mind (ToM) development. However, current evidence is primarily based on cross-sectional studies, with very little longitudinal evidence on the causal relation between the two constructs. The current study provided much-needed cross-lagged longitudinal evidence on the association between ToM and lying in young children. Adopting a short-term longitudinal design, we tested 104 normally developing children's (64 boys, M = 54.0 months) false belief understanding and lie-telling behaviors three times at 4-month intervals. Results showed the cross-lagged model fit the data well. Lie-telling behaviors exhibited moderate stability across the three time points, while ToM exhibited moderate stability between the first two time points but not between Time 2 and Time 3. Earlier false belief understanding significantly predicted children's later lie-telling behavior, controlling for family socioeconomic status, child age, gender, only child status, and Time 1 verbal ability and inhibitory control. On the contrary, earlier lie-telling did not predict later false beliefs understanding. We concluded that earlier false belief understanding predicts later lie-telling behavior in preschool children, but not vice versa. Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Social Development published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e12757 |
Journal | Social Development |
Volume | 33 |
Early online date | Jul 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Citation
Wang, Z., Gao, X., & Shao, Y. (2024). Earlier false belief understanding predicts later lie-telling behavior in preschool children, but not vice versa. Social Development, 33, Article e12757. https://doi.org/10.1111/sode.12757Keywords
- False belief understanding
- Lie-telling behavior
- Longitudinal study
- Preschool children
- Theory of mind