| Literature DB >> 35860012 |
Aurore Gaboriaud1,2, Flora Gautheron1,2, Jean-Charles Quinton2, Annique Smeding3.
Abstract
Over the past decade, moral judgments and their underlying decision processes have more frequently been considered from a dynamic and multi-factorial perspective rather than a binary approach (e.g., dual-system processes). The agent's intent and his or her causal role in the outcome-as well as the outcome importance-are key psychological factors that influence moral decisions, especially judgments of punishment. The current research aimed to study the influence of intent, outcome, and causality variations on moral decisions, and to identify their interaction during the decision process by embedding the moral scenarios within an adapted mouse-tracking paradigm. Findings of the preregistered study (final n = 80) revealed main effects for intent, outcome, and causality on judgments of punishment, and an interaction between the effects of intent and causality. We furthermore explored the dynamics of these effects during the decision process via the analysis of mouse trajectories in the course of time. It allowed detecting when these factors intervened during the trial time course. The present findings thus both replicate and extend previous research on moral judgment, and evidence that, despite some ongoing challenges, mouse-tracking represents a promising tool to investigate moral decision-making. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: causality; decision process; intent; moral judgment; mouse-tracking; outcome
Year: 2022 PMID: 35860012 PMCID: PMC9266851 DOI: 10.5334/pb.1157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Belg ISSN: 0033-2879
An example of the six versions of the same scenario adapted from Leloup et al. (2018).
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| VERSION OF THE SCENARIO | NOT INTENTIONAL & NEUTRAL OUTCOME (‘NEUTRAL’) | NOT INTENTIONAL & HARMFUL OUTCOME (‘ACCIDENTAL HARM’) |
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| Step 0. Context | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. |
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| Step 1. Intent | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was not alcoholic. | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was not alcoholic. |
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| Step 2. Outcome | Valerie is in condition to drive and does not have any accident on the way back home. | Valerie is not in condition to drive and has an accident on the way back home. |
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| Step 0. Context | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. |
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| Step 1. Intent | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was alcoholic. | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was alcoholic. |
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| Step 2. Outcome | Valerie is in condition to drive and does not have any accident on the way back home. | Valerie is not in condition to drive and has an accident on the way back home. |
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| Step 0. Context | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. | Cindy and Valerie decide to have a drink after work. Valerie has to drive her car to go back home. Valerie asks Cindy to order her a non-alcoholic cocktail while she goes to the bathroom. Cindy orders a homemade cocktail for Valerie. |
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| Step 1. Intent | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was alcoholic. | Cindy thought the homemade cocktail was not alcoholic. |
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| Step 2. Outcome | Valerie is in condition to drive but she hits an animal on the road and has an accident. | Valerie is in condition to drive but she hits an animal on the road and has an accident. |
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Note: The first four versions of the scenario (i.e., Neutral; Accidental Harm; Attempted Harm; Intentional Harm) were kept unaltered from the original material (Samson & Leloup, 2018). The last two were created within the same logic but adapted according to the model proposed by Cushman (2008, Experiment 3).
Figure 1Schematic procedure of the current mouse-tracking paradigm.
Note: The mouse pointer was not displayed during the trials but was included here in the figure for illustrative purposes.
Descriptive statistics for judgments of punishment in steps 1 and 2 across conditions.
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| CONDITION | JUDGMENTS IN STEP 1 | JUDGMENTS IN STEP 2 | |
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| INTENT | OUTCOME |
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| Intentional | Caused | 4.07 (0.12) | 4.56 (0.12) |
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| Not Caused | 3.96 (0.12) | 3.50 (0.12) | |
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| Neutral | 4.01 (0.12) | 3.19 (0.13) | |
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| Non-intentional | Caused | 1.96 (0.12) | 2.77 (0.13) |
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| Not Caused | 1.86 (0.11) | 1.97 (0.12) | |
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| Neutral | 1.89 (0.11) | 1.47 (0.11) | |
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Note: Judgments in step 1 correspond to judgments of punishment when only intent was available. Judgments in step 2, when both intent and outcome were available. Higher scores (on a 0–6 range) reflect more severe judgments of punishment.
Figure 2Judgments of punishment in step 1 (a) and in step 2 (b) depending on intent and outcome.
Note: Judgments in step 1 correspond to judgments of punishment when intent only was available; judgments in step 2, when both intent and outcome were available. Error bars represent SE.
Figure 3Effects of intent, outcome, causality, and their interactions depending on the time course in step 1 (a) and in step 2 (b).
Note: Y-coordinates were rescaled between 0 (less severe) and 6 (more severe), so that results at the end of trajectories match the judgment scale of Figure 2. Error bars represent SE.