Cognitive neuroscience of honesty and deception: A signaling framework

scientific article published on October 2016

Cognitive neuroscience of honesty and deception: A signaling framework is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1016/J.COBEHA.2016.09.005
P932PMC publication ID5042136
P698PubMed publication ID27695704

P2093author name stringMing Hsu
Lusha Zhu
Adrianna Jenkins
P2860cites workUsing brain imaging for lie detection: Where science, law, and policy collideQ21972823
An fMRI investigation of emotional engagement in moral judgmentQ28216269
The truth will out: interrogative polygraphy ("lie detection") with event-related brain potentialsQ28307454
Using fMRI to decode true thoughts independent of intention to concealQ30588531
A cognitive neurobiological account of deception: evidence from functional neuroimagingQ30978208
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Mentalizing under uncertainty: dissociated neural responses to ambiguous and unambiguous mental state inferencesQ33579723
The neural basis of economic decision-making in the Ultimatum GameQ33966573
People thinking about thinking people. The role of the temporo-parietal junction in "theory of mind".Q33968073
Brain activity during simulated deception: an event-related functional magnetic resonance studyQ34114384
Damage to dorsolateral prefrontal cortex affects tradeoffs between honesty and self-interest.Q34253005
Neural signatures of strategic types in a two-person bargaining gameQ34358836
The right and the good: distributive justice and neural encoding of equity and efficiencyQ34777535
The neural basis of deception in strategic interactionsQ35077302
A framework for studying the neurobiology of value-based decision makingQ35095683
Game theory and neural basis of social decision makingQ36700237
The contributions of prefrontal cortex and executive control to deception: evidence from activation likelihood estimate meta-analysesQ37220448
Patterns of neural activity associated with honest and dishonest moral decisionsQ37282517
Neural correlates of true memory, false memory, and deceptionQ38391424
Memory and law: what can cognitive neuroscience contribute?Q44245539
The motor cost of telling lies: electrocortical signatures and personality foundations of spontaneous deception.Q44560307
Response to anticipated reward in the nucleus accumbens predicts behavior in an independent test of honesty.Q47742282
Investigating socio-cognitive processes in deception: a quantitative meta-analysis of neuroimaging studiesQ48073252
The neural circuitry of a broken promiseQ48240840
Neural correlates of different types of deception: an fMRI investigationQ48256839
Neural correlates of outcome processing post dishonest choice: an fMRI and ERP study.Q48378982
Intentional false responding shares neural substrates with response conflict and cognitive controlQ48496663
Behavioural and functional anatomical correlates of deception in humansQ48763901
Neural correlates of telling lies: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study at 4 TeslaQ49032480
Deceptive copulation calls attract female visitors to peacock leks.Q50676650
Using response time measures to assess "guilty knowledge".Q51081872
Detecting deception from neuroimaging signals--a data-driven perspective.Q51892001
Detecting deception using functional magnetic resonance imagingQ81264994
Dissociable roles of prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortices in deceptionQ81694625
Functional MRI-based lie detection: scientific and societal challengesQ87395058
P921main subjectcognitive neuroscienceQ1138951
P304page(s)130-137
P577publication date2016-10-01
P1433published inCurrent Opinion in Behavioral SciencesQ24907969
P1476titleCognitive neuroscience of honesty and deception: A signaling framework
P478volume11

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q59813570Are Proselfs More Deceptive and Hypocritical? Social Image Concerns in Appearing Fair
Q100307167Contribution of self- and other-regarding motives to (dis)honesty

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