Moral Judgments Depend on Information Presentation: Evidence for Recency and Transfer Effects

被引:3
作者
Leloup, Laetitia [1 ]
Meert, Gaelle [1 ]
Samson, Dana [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Catholic Univ Louvain, Psychol Sci Res Inst, Louvain La Neuve, Belgium
[2] Catholic Univ Louvain, Inst Neurosci, Brussels, Belgium
关键词
moral judgement; within-scenario order effect; between-scenarios order effect; recency effect; transfer effect; NEURAL BASIS; ORDER; DILEMMAS; INTENT; CAUSAL; ROLES; BIAS; MIND;
D O I
10.5334/pb.421
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Moral judgements are crucial for social life and rely on the analysis of the agent's intention and the outcome of the agent's action. The current study examines to the influence of how the information is presented on moral judgement. The first experiment investigated the effects of the order in which intention and outcome information was presented. The results showed that participants relied more on the last presented information, suggesting a recency effect. The second experiment required participants to make two types of judgments (wrongness vs. punishment) and manipulated the order of the requested two types of judgments. Results showed an asymmetrical transfer effect whereby punishment judgements, but not wrongness judgements were affected by the order of presentation. This asymmetrical transfer effect was likely linked to the ambiguity of the punishment judgement. Altogether, the study showed that the order in which information was presented and the order in which one was asked to think about the wrongness of an action or the punishment that the action deserves were two factors that should be irrelevant, but actually influenced moral judgements. The influence of these factors was mostly observed during the most difficult judgements, precisely in situations where human decision is called upon, such as in court trials.
引用
收藏
页码:256 / 274
页数:19
相关论文
共 28 条
  • [1] Is It as Bad as It Looks? Judgments of Quantitative Scores Depend on Their Presentation Format
    Lembregts, Christophe
    Schepers, Jeroen
    Keyser, Arne De
    JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH, 2024, 61 (05) : 937 - 954
  • [2] The Effects of Intent, Outcome, and Causality on Moral Judgments and Decision Processes
    Gaboriaud, Aurore
    Gautheron, Flora
    Quinton, Jean-Charles
    Smeding, Annique
    PSYCHOLOGICA BELGICA, 2022, 62 (01) : 218 - 229
  • [3] Information-Acquisition Processes in Moral Judgments of Blame
    Guglielmo, Steve
    Malle, Bertram F.
    PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 2017, 43 (07) : 957 - 971
  • [4] Calculating Hypocrites Effect: Moral judgments of word-deed contradictory transgressions depend on targets' competence
    Dong, Mengchen
    Prooijen, Jan-Willem
    Lange, Paul A. M.
    JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, : 489 - 501
  • [5] Effects of Sadness and Fear on Moral Judgments in Public Emergency Events
    Zheng, Mufan
    Qin, Shiyao
    Zhao, Junhua
    BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2024, 14 (06)
  • [6] Increasing the role of belief information in moral judgments by stimulating the right temporoparietal junction
    Sellaro, Roberta
    Guroglu, Berna
    Nitsche, Michael A.
    van den Wildenberg, Wery P. M.
    Massaro, Valentina
    Durieux, Jeffrey
    Hommel, Bernhard
    Colzato, Lorenza S.
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2015, 77 : 400 - 408
  • [7] The Limits of Visual Working Memory in Children: Exploring Prioritization and Recency Effects With Sequential Presentation
    Berry, Ed D. J.
    Waterman, Amanda H.
    Baddeley, Alan D.
    Hitch, Graham J.
    Allen, Richard J.
    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 54 (02) : 240 - 253
  • [8] Presentation matters: how mode effects in item non-response depend on the presentation of response options
    Zeglovits, Eva
    Schwarzer, Steve
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2016, 19 (02) : 191 - 203
  • [9] Is Morality Unified? Evidence that Distinct Neural Systems Underlie Moral Judgments of Harm, Dishonesty, and Disgust
    Parkinson, Carolyn
    Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter
    Koralus, Philipp E.
    Mendelovici, Angela
    McGeer, Victoria
    Wheatley, Thalia
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2011, 23 (10) : 3162 - 3180
  • [10] Metacognition and learning about primacy and recency effects in free recall: The utilization of intrinsic and extrinsic cues when making judgments of learning
    Alan D. Castel
    Memory & Cognition, 2008, 36 : 429 - 437