
@article{ref1,
title="What they don't know won't hurt them: parents' judgments about lying to their adolescents",
journal="Journal of research on adolescence",
year="2020",
author="Gingo, Matthew and Roded, Alona D. and Turiel, Elliot",
volume="30",
number="1",
pages="95-108",
abstract="This research examined judgments about parents lying to their adolescents. Ninety-six participants from four primarily Caucasian groups (24 parents of 18-year-olds, 24 parents of 14-year-olds, 24 18-year-olds, and 24 14-year-olds) assessed hypothetical situations in which a parent lies to their adolescent about their past experience engaging in risky activities such as drug use and shoplifting. Evaluations and justifications for deception varied as a function of the domain of each act, the age of the adolescent being lied to, and consideration of parents' duty to foster a protective and trusting relationship. <br><br>RESULTS are discussed in terms of parents' and adolescents' reasoning about deception to achieve and resist socialization goals in several (moral, personal, prudential, and multifaceted) social-cognitive domains.<br><br>© 2019 Society for Research on Adolescence.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1050-8392",
doi="10.1111/jora.12503",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jora.12503"
}