Honesty is essential for both individual development and the functioning of society. Although prior research has identified various factors that shape honest behavior, relatively little is known about whether adolescents’ honesty can be influenced by subtle morality-related cues, particularly among adolescents. The present study investigated whether exposure to verbal and visual morality-related cues would increase honest behavior in middle school students. Two behavioral experiments were conducted, each with 120 middle school students (aged 13–18) as participants. In Experiment 1, participants completed a Chinese idiom -unscrambling task with either the ethics-related or neutral characters. In Experiment 2, participants completed a visual cuing task involving either moral exemplar images or neutral images. In both experiments, honest behaviors were assessed via self-reported outcomes in a computerized coin-tossing task. Across both experiments, participants primed with morality-related words (Experiment 1) or moral exemplars (Experiment 2) demonstrated significantly more honest behavior in the coin toss task than those in the control group. These findings suggest that subtle verbal and visual morality-related cues can increase honest behavior in adolescents. The present study provides behavioral evidence that morality-related cues may shape honesty-related responding in adolescence and offers practical implications for promoting moral development through subtle contextual influences.
Zeng et al. (Wed,) studied this question.