College of Psychology and Sociology, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China.
College of Psychology and Sociology, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China; Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Affective and Social Cognitive Science, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China.
Biol Psychol. 2019 Jul;145:55-61. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2019.04.007. Epub 2019 Apr 18.
The person-centered account of moral judgments is important since immoral behaviors are diagnostic of an individual's character. The present study explored how the professional stereotypes associated with the agents shaped the way people perceiving moral/immoral behaviors. The behavioral ratings and neural responses (i.e., P200, N2, LPC event-related potentials (ERPs)) to moral/immoral behaviors done by agents with respectable or ordinary professional roles were recorded and compared. Behaviorally, we found that participants rated the agent with a respectable professional role behaving immorally as more dislikable comparing to the agent with an ordinary professional role. For ERPs, we found that: 1) the agents with respectable professional roles elicited larger P200 than agents with ordinary professional roles did; 2) immoral behavior elicited larger LPC than moral behaviors did; 3) for agents with respectable professional roles, the immoral behaviors elicited significantly more positive N2 than the moral behaviors did whereas this difference was not significant for the agents with ordinary professional roles. The immoral behaviors done by agents with respectable professional roles elicited more positive N2 than the immoral behavior done by agents with ordinary professional roles. Moreover, this effect was correlated with the participants' subjective rating of the professional roles' respectable level. These results suggest that 1) the more the agents with respectable professional roles are respected, the more dislikable they became when behaving immorally; 2) the moral stereotype associated with professional roles can influence the early processing stage reflected in N2 but not the later evaluative process reflected in LPC.
人本位的道德判断观点很重要,因为不道德的行为是个体性格的诊断依据。本研究探讨了与行为者相关的专业刻板印象如何影响人们对道德/不道德行为的感知。记录并比较了人们对具有可敬或普通职业角色的行为者做出的道德/不道德行为的行为评价和神经反应(即 P200、N2、LPC 事件相关电位(ERPs))。行为上,我们发现与具有普通职业角色的行为者相比,参与者对具有可敬职业角色的行为者做出不道德行为的评价更为不喜欢。对于 ERPs,我们发现:1)具有可敬职业角色的行为者诱发的 P200 大于具有普通职业角色的行为者;2)不道德行为比道德行为诱发的 LPC 更大;3)对于具有可敬职业角色的行为者,不道德行为诱发的 N2 比道德行为显著更积极,而对于具有普通职业角色的行为者,这种差异不显著。具有可敬职业角色的行为者做出的不道德行为比具有普通职业角色的行为者做出的不道德行为诱发的 N2 更积极。此外,这种效果与参与者对职业角色可敬程度的主观评价相关。这些结果表明:1)具有可敬职业角色的行为者越受尊敬,他们做出不道德行为时就越令人讨厌;2)与职业角色相关的道德刻板印象可以影响 N2 反映的早期加工阶段,但不能影响 LPC 反映的后期评价过程。