نتایج جستجو برای: impersonal moral dilemmas

تعداد نتایج: 48254  

Journal: :Social neuroscience 2012
D Tempesta A Couyoumdjian F Moroni C Marzano L De Gennaro M Ferrara

Recent studies have shown the existence of a relationship between sleep and moral judgment. In this study, we investigated whether one night of sleep deprivation affects the ability to judge the appropriateness of moral dilemmas. Forty-eight students had to judge 30 moral dilemmas at test, after a night of home sleep, and another 30 dilemmas at retest, following one night of continuous wakefuln...

Journal: :تحقیقات علوم رفتاری 0
مریم ضیایی محمد کریم خداپناهی محمود حیدری فاطمه کشوری m ziaei mk khodapanahi

background and aim: moral psychology studies investigate cognitive and emotional systems involved in moral judgments. this research also examines the effect of emotion manipulation on reaction times to moral dilemmas. method and materials: this was a causal relational study executed on eighty five randomly selected 18-25 year old students from shahid beheshti university. to investigate moral ju...

Journal: :Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry 2014
Alexis E Whitton Julie D Henry Jessica R Grisham

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Abnormalities in cognitive control and disgust responding are well-documented in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and also interfere with flexible, outcome-driven utilitarian moral reasoning. The current study examined whether individuals with OCD differ from healthy and anxious individuals in their use of utilitarian moral reasoning, and whether abnormalities in i...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2007
Elisa Ciaramelli Michela Muccioli Elisabetta Làdavas Giuseppe di Pellegrino

Recent fMRI evidence has detected increased medial prefrontal activation during contemplation of personal moral dilemmas compared to impersonal ones, which suggests that this cortical region plays a role in personal moral judgment. However, functional imaging results cannot definitively establish that a brain area is necessary for a particular cognitive process. This requires evidence from lesi...

2016
Petko Kusev Paul van Schaik Shrooq Alzahrani Samantha Lonigro Harry Purser

Is it acceptable and moral to sacrifice a few people's lives to save many others? Research on moral dilemmas in psychology, experimental philosophy, and neuropsychology has shown that respondents judge utilitarian personal moral actions (footbridge dilemma) as less appropriate than equivalent utilitarian impersonal moral actions (trolley dilemma). Accordingly, theorists (e.g., Greene et al., 20...

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. General 2013
Adam M Perkins Ania M Leonard Kristin Weaver Jeffrey A Dalton Mitul A Mehta Veena Kumari Steven C R Williams Ulrich Ettinger

Neuroimaging data suggest that emotional brain systems are more strongly engaged by moral dilemmas in which innocent people are directly harmed than by dilemmas in which harm is remotely inflicted. In order to test the possibility that this emotional engagement involves anxiety, we investigated the effects of 1 mg and 2 mg of the anti-anxiety drug lorazepam on the response choices of 40 healthy...

2012
Lotfi Khemiri Joar Guterstam Johan Franck Nitya Jayaram-Lindström

Recent studies indicate that emotional processes, mediated by the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPC), are of great importance for moral judgment. Neurological patients with VMPC dysfunction have been shown to generate increased utilitarian moral judgments, i.e. are more likely to endorse emotionally aversive actions in order to maximize aggregate welfare, when faced with emotionally salient ...

2017
Vjeran Keric Evgenia Hristova

Previous research suggests that participants may be susceptible to confirmation bias after making decisions in moral dilemmas. We manipulated the type of moral dilemmas (personal or impersonal) and the framing of the question prompting participants to respond (emphasizing saving five people or sacrificing one person). The actors in the dilemmas were represented by a series of silhouettes. Eye t...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2014
Julia F Christensen Albert Flexas Pedro de Miguel Camilo J Cela-Conde Enric Munar

This study provides exploratory evidence about how behavioral and neural responses to standard moral dilemmas are influenced by religious belief. Eleven Catholics and 13 Atheists (all female) judged 48 moral dilemmas. Differential neural activity between the two groups was found in precuneus and in prefrontal, frontal and temporal regions. Furthermore, a double dissociation showed that Catholic...

2012
Adam B. Moore N. Y. Louis Lee Brian A. M. Clark Andrew R. A. Conway

The dual process model of moral judgment (DPM; Greene et al., 2004) argues that such judgments are influenced by both emotion-laden intuition and controlled reasoning. These influences are associated with distinct neural circuitries and different response tendencies. After reanalyzing data from an earlier study, McGuire et al. (2009) questioned the level of support for the dual process model an...

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