Tanner Carmen, Medin Douglas L
Social and Business Psychology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2004 Feb;11(1):185-91. doi: 10.3758/bf03206481.
Previous studies have suggested that people holding protected values (PVs) show a bias against harmful acts, as opposed to harmful omissions (omission bias). In the present study, we (1) investigated the relationship between PVs and acts versus omissions in risky choices, using a paradigm in which act and omission biases were presented in a symmetrical manner, and (2) examined whether people holding PVs respond differently to framing manipulations. Participants were given environmental scenarios and were asked to make choices between actions and omissions. Both the framing of the outcomes (positive vs. negative) and the outcome certainty (risky vs. certain) were manipulated. In contrast to previous studies, PVs were linked to preferences for acts, rather than for omissions. PVs were more likely to be associated with moral obligations to act than with moral prohibitions against action. Strikingly, people with strong PVs were immune to framing; participants with few PVs showed robust framing effects.
以往的研究表明,持有受保护价值观(PVs)的人对有害行为表现出偏见,这与有害不作为(不作为偏见)相反。在本研究中,我们(1)使用一种以对称方式呈现行为和不作为偏见的范式,调查了PVs与风险选择中的行为和不作为之间的关系,并且(2)研究了持有PVs的人对框架操纵的反应是否不同。参与者被给予环境情景,并被要求在行动和不作为之间做出选择。结果的框架(积极与消极)和结果确定性(有风险与确定)均受到操纵。与以往的研究不同,PVs与对行为的偏好相关,而非与对不作为的偏好相关。PVs更有可能与行动的道德义务相关,而不是与对行动的道德禁令相关。令人惊讶的是,具有强烈PVs的人不受框架影响;PVs较少的参与者表现出强烈的框架效应。