Xiong Weirui, Wang Jiaxin, Li Jiayi
School of Educational Science, Chongqing Normal University, Chongqing, China.
PLoS One. 2025 May 27;20(5):e0324991. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0324991. eCollection 2025.
This study aims to explore the unconscious relationship between moral concepts and the spatial dimension of size, as well as to examine whether the unknown size of a room influences participants' moral cognitive judgments within the framework of embodied cognition. Study 1 and Study 2 investigate participants' unconscious biases. Specifically, participants exhibited faster response times when judging moral concepts presented in large fonts and sizes and immoral concepts presented in small fonts and sizes, compared to when moral concepts were presented in small fonts and sizes and immoral concepts in large fonts and sizes. Study 3 employed a moral dilemma task, revealing that participants placed in a large room evaluated characters in a story more morally under the embodiment effect than those in a small room. Collectively, these three studies demonstrate that the unconscious psychological relationship between moral concepts and the spatial dimension of size influences individuals' abstract moral judgments under embodied cognition.
本研究旨在探讨道德概念与大小空间维度之间的无意识关系,并检验在具身认知框架下,房间未知大小是否会影响参与者的道德认知判断。研究1和研究2调查了参与者的无意识偏见。具体而言,与以小字体和小尺寸呈现道德概念、以大字体和大尺寸呈现不道德概念相比,当以大字体和大尺寸呈现道德概念、以小字体和小尺寸呈现不道德概念时,参与者的反应时间更快。研究3采用了道德困境任务,结果显示,在具身效应下,处于大房间的参与者比处于小房间的参与者在道德层面上对故事中的人物评价更高。这三项研究共同表明,道德概念与大小空间维度之间的无意识心理关系在具身认知下会影响个体的抽象道德判断。