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自然主义戏剧叙事中对道德违规行为的替代性惩罚可预测皮质同步。

Vicarious punishment of moral violations in naturalistic drama narratives predicts cortical synchronization.

机构信息

University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Communication - Media Neuroscience Lab; University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences; Ewha Womans University, Department of Communication and Media.

University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam School of Communication Research.

出版信息

Neuroimage. 2024 Apr 15;292:120613. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120613. Epub 2024 Apr 16.

Abstract

Punishment of moral norm violators is instrumental for human cooperation. Yet, social and affective neuroscience research has primarily focused on second- and third-party norm enforcement, neglecting the neural architecture underlying observed (vicarious) punishment of moral wrongdoers. We used naturalistic television drama as a sampling space for observing outcomes of morally-relevant behaviors to assess how individuals cognitively process dynamically evolving moral actions and their consequences. Drawing on Affective Disposition Theory, we derived hypotheses linking character morality with viewers' neural processing of characters' rewards and punishments. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine neural responses of 28 female participants while free-viewing 15 short story summary video clips of episodes from a popular US television soap opera. Each summary included a complete narrative structure, fully crossing main character behaviors (moral/immoral) and the consequences (reward/punishment) characters faced for their actions. Narrative engagement was examined via intersubject correlation and representational similarity analysis. Highest cortical synchronization in 9 specifically selected regions previously implicated in processing moral information was observed when characters who act immorally are punished for their actions with participants' empathy as an important moderator. The results advance our understanding of the moral brain and the role of normative considerations and character outcomes in viewers' engagement with popular narratives.

摘要

对违反道德规范者的惩罚有助于人类合作。然而,社会和情感神经科学研究主要集中在第二方和第三方规范执行上,忽视了观察到的(替代性)对道德不当行为者进行惩罚的神经结构。我们使用自然主义电视剧作为抽样空间来观察与道德相关的行为结果,以评估个人如何认知地处理动态演变的道德行为及其后果。我们借鉴情感倾向理论,提出了将角色道德与观众对角色奖惩的神经处理联系起来的假设。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来检查 28 名女性参与者在自由观看 15 个简短的电视剧情概要视频剪辑时的神经反应,这些视频剪辑来自美国一部流行电视剧的剧集。每个摘要都包含一个完整的叙事结构,完全交叉主角的行为(道德/不道德)以及角色因行为而面临的后果(奖励/惩罚)。通过主体间相关性和代表性相似性分析来检查叙事参与度。当不道德行为的角色因行为受到惩罚而受到参与者同理心的重要调节时,在之前被认为与处理道德信息有关的 9 个特定选择区域中观察到最高的皮质同步。研究结果推进了我们对道德大脑的理解,以及规范考虑和角色结果在观众对流行叙事的参与中的作用。

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