When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.

Early adulthood is a developmentally important time period, with many novel life events needing to be traversed for the first time. Despite this important transition period, few studies examine the development of moral decision-making processes during this critical life stage. In the present study,...

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Main Authors: Kathryn L Bollich, Patrick L Hill, Peter D Harms, Joshua J Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4709233?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fe0570a72c324c338fcf25417566f5402020-11-25T01:25:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01111e014671610.1371/journal.pone.0146716When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.Kathryn L BollichPatrick L HillPeter D HarmsJoshua J JacksonEarly adulthood is a developmentally important time period, with many novel life events needing to be traversed for the first time. Despite this important transition period, few studies examine the development of moral decision-making processes during this critical life stage. In the present study, college students completed moral decision-making measures during their freshman and senior years of college. Results indicate that, across four years, moral decision-making demonstrates considerable rank-order stability as well as change, such that people become more likely to help a friend relative to following societal rules. To help understand the mechanisms driving changes in moral decision-making processes, we examined their joint development with personality traits, a known correlate that changes during early adulthood in the direction of greater maturity. We found little evidence that personality and moral decision-making developmental processes are related. In sum, findings indicate that while moral decision-making processes are relatively stable across a four-year period, changes do occur which are likely independent of developmental processes driving personality trait change.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4709233?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kathryn L Bollich
Patrick L Hill
Peter D Harms
Joshua J Jackson
spellingShingle Kathryn L Bollich
Patrick L Hill
Peter D Harms
Joshua J Jackson
When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kathryn L Bollich
Patrick L Hill
Peter D Harms
Joshua J Jackson
author_sort Kathryn L Bollich
title When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
title_short When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
title_full When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
title_fullStr When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
title_full_unstemmed When Friends' and Society's Expectations Collide: A Longitudinal Study of Moral Decision-Making and Personality across College.
title_sort when friends' and society's expectations collide: a longitudinal study of moral decision-making and personality across college.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Early adulthood is a developmentally important time period, with many novel life events needing to be traversed for the first time. Despite this important transition period, few studies examine the development of moral decision-making processes during this critical life stage. In the present study, college students completed moral decision-making measures during their freshman and senior years of college. Results indicate that, across four years, moral decision-making demonstrates considerable rank-order stability as well as change, such that people become more likely to help a friend relative to following societal rules. To help understand the mechanisms driving changes in moral decision-making processes, we examined their joint development with personality traits, a known correlate that changes during early adulthood in the direction of greater maturity. We found little evidence that personality and moral decision-making developmental processes are related. In sum, findings indicate that while moral decision-making processes are relatively stable across a four-year period, changes do occur which are likely independent of developmental processes driving personality trait change.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4709233?pdf=render
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