Action Modulates the Conscious Reasoning Process of Moral Judgment: Evidence From Behavior and Neurophysiology

Moral judgment can be highly affected by the action and intention factors on a behavior level. Previous neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that the intention factor can modulate both the affective and cognitive processing of moral judgment. The present event-related potentials (ERP) study examin...

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Published inFrontiers in behavioral neuroscience Vol. 14; p. 577252
Main Authors Leng, Yue, Zhang, Jili, Zhangyu, Yanan, Yang, Xiaoyuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Research Foundation 06.01.2021
Frontiers Media S.A
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Summary:Moral judgment can be highly affected by the action and intention factors on a behavior level. Previous neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that the intention factor can modulate both the affective and cognitive processing of moral judgment. The present event-related potentials (ERP) study examined how the action factor modulated the neural dynamics of moral judgment under a newly developed moral dilemma paradigm including three different conditions: harm caused by action (i.e., doing harm), harm caused by omission (i.e., allowing harm), and no harm. Behavior data showed that participants preferred utilitarian judgments and spent less time on the allowing harm condition than for the doing harm condition. ERP results revealed that, compared with the doing harm and no harm dilemmas, the allowing harm dilemmas elicited an enhanced N450 response associated with cognitive control and/or cognitive effort processes, but attenuated a late positive potentials (LPP) response associated with top-down control of attention and cognitive "rational" control processes. Such LPP amplitude differences were positively correlated with the C-score of the moral competence test which indexed the cognitive aspect of moral judgment competency. These findings suggested that people have a strong omission bias, and such an action factor modulates the conscious reasoning process during moral judgment, including the cognitive control and/or cognitive effort, and attentional allocation processes.
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Edited by: Walter Adriani, National Institute of Health (ISS), Italy
Reviewed by: Roger Marcelo Martinez, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan; Ilaria Cutica, University of Milan, Italy
This article was submitted to Individual and Social Behaviors, a section of the journal Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
ISSN:1662-5153
1662-5153
DOI:10.3389/fnbeh.2020.577252