First Published: 21 March 2017In response to the same moral violation, some people report experiencing anger, and others report feeling disgust. Do differences in emotional responses to moral violations reflect idiosyncratic differences in the communication of outrage, or do they reflect differences in motivational states? Whereas equivalence accounts suggest that anger and disgust are interchangeable expressions of condemnation, sociofunctional accounts suggest that they have distinct antecedents and consequences. We tested these accounts by investigating whether anger and disgust vary depending on the costs imposed by moral violations and whether they differentially correspond with aggressive tendencies. Results across four studies favor ...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgments of wrongdoing. We...
We propose that, when people judge moral situations, anger responds to the contextual cues of harm a...
In response to the same moral violation, some people report experiencing anger, and others report fe...
In response to the same moral violation, some people report experiencing anger, and others report fe...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
Moral violations often evoke disgust. While it has been consistently shown that disgust is a predomi...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
The purpose of this thesis was to compare the cognitive processes that accompany moral anger and dis...
Recent research has highlighted the important role of emotion in moral judgment and decision making ...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgments of wrongdoing. We...
We propose that, when people judge moral situations, anger responds to the contextual cues of harm a...
In response to the same moral violation, some people report experiencing anger, and others report fe...
In response to the same moral violation, some people report experiencing anger, and others report fe...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
People often report disgust toward moral violations. Some perspectives posit that this disgust is in...
Moral violations often evoke disgust. While it has been consistently shown that disgust is a predomi...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
The research examines whether anger rather than disgust is more likely to be responsible for changes...
The purpose of this thesis was to compare the cognitive processes that accompany moral anger and dis...
Recent research has highlighted the important role of emotion in moral judgment and decision making ...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgements of wrongdoing. W...
With the recent upswing in research interest on the moral implications of disgust, there has been un...
Anger may be more responsive than disgust to mitigating circumstances in judgments of wrongdoing. We...
We propose that, when people judge moral situations, anger responds to the contextual cues of harm a...