Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas

In the sacrificial moral dilemma task, participants have to morally judge an action that saves several lives at the cost of killing one person. According to the dual process corrective model of moral judgment suggested by Greene and collaborators (2001; 2004; 2008), cognitive control is necessary to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alejandro Rosas, Juan Pablo Bermúdez, David Aguilar-Pardo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2019-09-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/19/190615/jdm190615.pdf
id doaj-786235f2d21c43f181e348ab7679dc7d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-786235f2d21c43f181e348ab7679dc7d2021-05-02T16:40:29ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752019-09-01145555564Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmasAlejandro RosasJuan Pablo BermúdezDavid Aguilar-PardoIn the sacrificial moral dilemma task, participants have to morally judge an action that saves several lives at the cost of killing one person. According to the dual process corrective model of moral judgment suggested by Greene and collaborators (2001; 2004; 2008), cognitive control is necessary to override the intuitive, deontological force of the norm against killing and endorse the utilitarian perspective. However, a conflict model has been proposed more recently to account for part of the evidence in favor of dual process models in moral and social decision making. In this model, conflict, moral responses and reaction times arise from the interplay between individually variable motivational factors and objective parameters intrinsic to the choices offered. To further explore this model in the moral dilemma task, we confronted three different samples with a set of dilemmas representing an objective gradient of utilitarian pull, and collected data on moral judgment and on conflict in a 4-point scale. Collapsing all cases along the gradient, participants in each sample felt less conflicted on average when they gave extreme responses (1 or 4 in the UR scale). They felt less conflicted on average when responding to either the low- or the high-pull cases. The correlation between utilitarian responses and conflict was positive in the low-pull and negative in the high-pull cases. This pattern of data suggests that moral responses to sacrificial dilemmas are driven by decision conflict, which in turn depends on the interplay between an objective gradient of utilitarian pull and the moral motivations which regulate individual responsiveness to this gradient.http://journal.sjdm.org/19/190615/jdm190615.pdfconflict decision conflict deontology dual-process moral dilemmas utilitarianismKeywords
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alejandro Rosas
Juan Pablo Bermúdez
David Aguilar-Pardo
spellingShingle Alejandro Rosas
Juan Pablo Bermúdez
David Aguilar-Pardo
Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
Judgment and Decision Making
conflict
decision conflict
deontology
dual-process
moral dilemmas
utilitarianismKeywords
author_facet Alejandro Rosas
Juan Pablo Bermúdez
David Aguilar-Pardo
author_sort Alejandro Rosas
title Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
title_short Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
title_full Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
title_fullStr Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
title_full_unstemmed Decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
title_sort decision conflict drives reaction times and utilitarian responses in sacrificial dilemmas
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2019-09-01
description In the sacrificial moral dilemma task, participants have to morally judge an action that saves several lives at the cost of killing one person. According to the dual process corrective model of moral judgment suggested by Greene and collaborators (2001; 2004; 2008), cognitive control is necessary to override the intuitive, deontological force of the norm against killing and endorse the utilitarian perspective. However, a conflict model has been proposed more recently to account for part of the evidence in favor of dual process models in moral and social decision making. In this model, conflict, moral responses and reaction times arise from the interplay between individually variable motivational factors and objective parameters intrinsic to the choices offered. To further explore this model in the moral dilemma task, we confronted three different samples with a set of dilemmas representing an objective gradient of utilitarian pull, and collected data on moral judgment and on conflict in a 4-point scale. Collapsing all cases along the gradient, participants in each sample felt less conflicted on average when they gave extreme responses (1 or 4 in the UR scale). They felt less conflicted on average when responding to either the low- or the high-pull cases. The correlation between utilitarian responses and conflict was positive in the low-pull and negative in the high-pull cases. This pattern of data suggests that moral responses to sacrificial dilemmas are driven by decision conflict, which in turn depends on the interplay between an objective gradient of utilitarian pull and the moral motivations which regulate individual responsiveness to this gradient.
topic conflict
decision conflict
deontology
dual-process
moral dilemmas
utilitarianismKeywords
url http://journal.sjdm.org/19/190615/jdm190615.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT alejandrorosas decisionconflictdrivesreactiontimesandutilitarianresponsesinsacrificialdilemmas
AT juanpablobermudez decisionconflictdrivesreactiontimesandutilitarianresponsesinsacrificialdilemmas
AT davidaguilarpardo decisionconflictdrivesreactiontimesandutilitarianresponsesinsacrificialdilemmas
_version_ 1721489843278577664