Abstract
It has been widely accepted that moral violations that involve impurity (such as spitting in public) induce the emotion of disgust, but there has been a debate about whether moral violations that do not involve impurity (such as swearing in public) also induce the same emotion. The answer to this question may have implication for understanding where morality comes from and how people make moral judgments. This study aimed to compared the neural mechanisms underlying two kinds of moral violation by using an affective priming task to test the effect of sentences depicting moral violation behaviors with and without physical impurity on subsequent detection of disgusted faces in a visual search task. After reading each sentence, participants completed the face search task. Behavioral and electrophysiological (event-related potential, or ERP) indices of affective priming (P2, N400, LPP) and attention allocation (N2pc) were analyzed. Results of behavioral data and ERP data showed that moral violations both with and without impurity promoted the detection of disgusted faces (RT, N2pc); moral violations without impurity impeded the detection of neutral faces (N400). No priming effect was found on P2 and LPP. The results suggest both types of moral violation influenced the processing of disgusted faces and neutral faces, but the neural activity with temporal characteristics was different.
Funder
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
the MOE (Ministry of Education in China) Project of Humanities and Social Sciences
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference76 articles.
1. Developing a measure of unethical behavior in the workplace: a stakeholder perspective;M Kaptein;Journal of Management,2008
2. A Theory on the Mechanism Underlying Moral Intuitions;XH Tian;Advances in Psychological Science,2011
3. Construal levels and moral judgment: Some complications;H Gong;Judgment and Decision Making,2012
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献