Title of article :
Morality in high definition: Emotion differentiation calibrates the influence of incidental disgust on moral judgments
Author/Authors :
Cameron، نويسنده , , C. Daryl and Payne، نويسنده , , B. Keith and Doris، نويسنده , , John M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Changing peopleʹs emotions can change their moral judgments, even when the emotions are incidental to the judgment and hence morally irrelevant. It has commonly been assumed that people lack the motivation or ability to correct against such incidental emotional influences. We provide evidence that the ability to make fine-grained distinctions between emotions is an important moderator of these effects. In two experiments, we found that measured (Experiment 1) and manipulated (Experiment 2) emotion differentiation calibrated the relationship between incidental disgust and moral judgments. Whereas unskilled emotion differentiators made stronger moral judgments after incidental disgust priming, skilled emotion differentiators did not. Emotion differentiation may sharpen moral perception, by enabling people to discount incidental emotions while making moral judgments.
Keywords :
Priming , Affect misattribution , moral judgment , Disgust , Emotion differentiation , morality
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology