Department of Psychology, College of Arts and Sciences, the University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, USA.
Soc Neurosci. 2022 Jun;17(3):246-257. doi: 10.1080/17470919.2022.2076733. Epub 2022 May 21.
Trolley problems have persisted as a popular method to examine moral decision-making in the face of many criticisms. One such criticism is that thought experiments provide unrealistically abundant contextual information, leading to mental simulation. Recent work utilizing virtual reality technology has reduced contextual information with mixed results. However, this work has not departed entirely from the thought experiment tradition, often providing written or verbal descriptions of the trolley problem before or during the simulation. This approach may still allow for mental simulation prior to decision-making. The goal of the current study is to examine whether or not this criticism is relevant for the classic version of the trolley problem. One hundred and nineteen participants were randomly assigned to either receive prior contextual information about the trolley problem or receive no information. All participants then entered a virtual reality simulation of the classic trolley problem. We examined decision-making from an affective and autonomic nervous system perspective. We found no effect on any measure in response to the reduction of contextual information. There were, however, surprising gender differences in decision-making and autonomic response. Further, we discuss how these findings relate to competing dual-process models of moral decision-making.
trolley 问题作为一种在面对许多批评时检验道德决策的流行方法一直存在。其中一个批评是,思想实验提供了不切实际的丰富背景信息,导致心理模拟。最近利用虚拟现实技术的工作减少了背景信息,但结果喜忧参半。然而,这项工作并没有完全脱离思想实验的传统,通常在模拟之前或期间提供 trolley 问题的书面或口头描述。这种方法仍然可以在决策之前进行心理模拟。本研究的目的是检验这一批评是否与 trolley 问题的经典版本有关。119 名参与者被随机分配接受 trolley 问题的预先背景信息或不接受任何信息。然后,所有参与者都进入了经典 trolley 问题的虚拟现实模拟。我们从情感和自主神经系统的角度来研究决策。我们没有发现减少背景信息对任何措施有影响。然而,在决策和自主反应方面存在令人惊讶的性别差异。此外,我们还讨论了这些发现与竞争的道德决策双过程模型的关系。