The Interactive Effect of Anger and Disgust on Moral Outrage and Judgments

被引:129
|
作者
Salerno, Jessica M. [1 ]
Peter-Hagene, Liana C. [2 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Glendale, AZ 85306 USA
[2] Univ Illinois, Chicago, IL USA
关键词
morality; emotions; judgment; legal processes; PSYCHOLOGY; EMOTIONS; BLAME;
D O I
10.1177/0956797613486988
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The two studies reported here demonstrated that a combination of anger and disgust predicts moral outrage. In Study 1, anger toward moral transgressions (sexual assault, funeral picketing) predicted moral outrage only when it co-occurred with at least moderate disgust, and disgust predicted moral outrage only when it co-occurred with at least moderate anger. In Study 2, a mock-jury paradigm that included emotionally disturbing photographs of a murder victim revealed that, compared to anger, disgust was a more consistent predictor of moral outrage (i.e., it predicted moral outrage at all levels of anger). Furthermore, moral outrage mediated the effect of participants' anger on their confidence in a guilty verdictbut only when anger co-occurred with at least a moderate level of disgustwhereas moral outrage mediated the effect of participants' disgust on their verdict confidence at all levels of anger. The interactive effect of anger and disgust has important implications for theoretical explanations of moral outrage, moral judgments in general, and legal decision making.
引用
收藏
页码:2069 / 2078
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Reviving social work through moral outrage
    Williams, Charlotte
    Briskman, Linda
    CRITICAL AND RADICAL SOCIAL WORK, 2015, 3 (01) : 3 - 17
  • [42] Moral disengagement of hotel guest negative WOM: Moral identity centrality, moral awareness, and anger
    He, Hongwei
    Harris, Lloyd
    ANNALS OF TOURISM RESEARCH, 2014, 45 : 132 - 151
  • [43] Outrage towards whom? Threats to moral group status impede striving to improve via out-group-directed outrage
    Tauber, Susanne
    van Zomeren, Martijn
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 43 (02) : 149 - 159
  • [44] How Counterfeits Infect Genuine Products: The Role of Moral Disgust
    Amar, Moty
    Ariely, Dan
    Carmon, Ziv
    Yang, Haiyang
    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 28 (02) : 329 - 343
  • [45] Autonomic correlates of physical and moral disgust
    Ottaviani, Cristina
    Mancini, Francesco
    Petrocchi, Nicola
    Medea, Barbara
    Couyoumdjian, Alessandro
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 89 (01) : 57 - 62
  • [46] A Bad Taste in the Mouth: Gustatory Disgust Influences Moral Judgment
    Eskine, Kendall J.
    Kacinik, Natalie A.
    Prinz, Jesse J.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2011, 22 (03) : 295 - 299
  • [47] Moral anger as a dilemma? An investigation on how leader moral anger influences follower trust
    Shao, Bo
    LEADERSHIP QUARTERLY, 2019, 30 (03) : 365 - 382
  • [48] Sex matters: Examination of disgust and morality judgments of transgressions committed by homosexuals and heterosexuals
    Olatunji, Bunmi O.
    Puncochar, Bieke David
    Kramer, Lindsay
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2017, 104 : 297 - 302
  • [49] Disentangling the Effect of Valence and Arousal on Judgments Concerning Moral Transgressions
    de la Vina, Luis
    Garcia-Burgos, David
    Okan, Yasmina
    Candido, Antonio
    Gonzalez, Felisa
    SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 18 : E61
  • [50] Anger and Sadness as Moral Signals
    Plaks, Jason E.
    Robinson, Jeffrey S.
    Forbes, Rachel
    SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE, 2022, 13 (02) : 362 - 371