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When context matters: how false,truthful, and genre-related communication styles are revealed in language
Authors:David M. Markowitz  Darrin J. Griffin
Affiliation:1. School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon, Eugene, USAdmark@uoregon.edu"ORCIDhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7159-7014;3. Department of Communication Studies, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

In this preregistered experiment, we address an understudied question in the deception and language literature: What is the impact of context on false and truthful language patterns? Drawing on two theories, Truth-Default Theory and the Contextual Organization of Language and Deception model, we instructed participants (N?=?639) to lie, tell the truth, or write within a genre without explicit lying or truth-telling instructions across different topics (e.g. their friends, attitudes on abortion). The results successfully replicate several cue-based models for self-references and negative affect, such as the Newman Pennebaker model of deception. Participants without lying or truth-telling instructions, but who wrote within genre conventions, showed markedly similar patterns to truth-tellers, though indicators of analytic thinking, adjectives, and auxiliary verbs were distinct. The data were also evaluated with a topic modeling approach and suggest that the abortion process was construed negatively when people lied about the topic. Truth-tellers construed abortion in objective terms and genre-related speech highlighted key role-players (e.g. the government, men, women, baby). We discuss how these data advance deception and language theory.
Keywords:Deception  language  context  automated text analysis  genre
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