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1 .This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Christie Nicholson.Got a minute?
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2 .See you're texting with a friend.
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3 .The back and forth is fast and furious.
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4 .Until…there's an awkwardly long pause.
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5 .Now you might think, aw, they just got another call, or they had to get back to dinner, whatever.
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6 .But maybe…they're about to lie to you.
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7 .At least that was one conclusion from an experiment published in a journal called ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems.
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8 .Scientists had 100 participants converse via online text with a specially developed computer program.
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9 .The computer asked each participant 30 questions.
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10 .And the participants were instructed to lie in half the responses.
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11 .The researchers found that the lies took 10 percent longer to write, were shorter and were edited more than the truthful messages.
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12 .How can you tell if someone is heavily editing a text?
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13 .While newer smartphones let you know when the other person is typing.
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14 .A lot of starting and stopping could mean that the texter is carefully constructing a response that might not hold up in a court of law.
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15 .Bottom line: dishonest texts take longer on average to write,
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16 .but it's also possible your friend may be just making an honest attempt to fix those pesky incorrect auto-corrects.
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17 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Christie Nicholson.
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