Human moral judgment depends critically on “theory of mind,” the capacity to represent the mental states of agents. Recent studies suggest that the right TPJ (RTPJ) and, to lesser extent, the left TPJ (LTPJ), the precuneus (PC), and the medial pFC (MPFC) are robustly recruited when participants read explicit statements of an agent's beliefs and then judge the moral status of the agent's action. Real-world interactions, by contrast, often require social partners to infer each other's mental states. The current study uses fMRI to probe the role of these brain regions in supporting spontaneous mental state inference in the service of moral judgment. Participants read descriptions of a protagonist's action and then either (i) “moral” facts abou...
International audienceThe ability to make judgments about mental states is critical to social intera...
Neuroimaging research has demonstrated the involvement of a well-defined brain network in the mediat...
Judgments about whether an action is morally right or wrong typically depend on our capacity to infe...
Moral sense is defined as a feeling of the rightness or wrongness of an action that knowingly causes...
Background: There appears to be an inconsistency in experimental paradigms used in fMRI research on ...
Moral judgment depends critically on theory of mind (ToM), reasoning about mental states such as bel...
Intentional harms are typically judged to be morally worse than accidental harms. Distinguishing bet...
AbstractTraditional theories of moral psychology emphasize reasoning and “higher cognition,” while m...
& The traditional philosophical doctrines of Consequentialism, Doing and Allowing, and Double Ef...
Human morality has been investigated using a variety of tasks ranging from judgments of hypothetical...
The human capacity to reason about others' minds includes making causal inferences about intentions,...
Adecade’s researchhighlights a critical dissociationbetweenautomatic andcontrolled influencesonmoral...
Moral judgment involves considering not only the outcome of an action but also the intention with wh...
Moral cognition is associated with activation of the default network, regions implicated in mentaliz...
When we judge an action as morally right or wrong, we rely on our capacity to infer the actor's ment...
International audienceThe ability to make judgments about mental states is critical to social intera...
Neuroimaging research has demonstrated the involvement of a well-defined brain network in the mediat...
Judgments about whether an action is morally right or wrong typically depend on our capacity to infe...
Moral sense is defined as a feeling of the rightness or wrongness of an action that knowingly causes...
Background: There appears to be an inconsistency in experimental paradigms used in fMRI research on ...
Moral judgment depends critically on theory of mind (ToM), reasoning about mental states such as bel...
Intentional harms are typically judged to be morally worse than accidental harms. Distinguishing bet...
AbstractTraditional theories of moral psychology emphasize reasoning and “higher cognition,” while m...
& The traditional philosophical doctrines of Consequentialism, Doing and Allowing, and Double Ef...
Human morality has been investigated using a variety of tasks ranging from judgments of hypothetical...
The human capacity to reason about others' minds includes making causal inferences about intentions,...
Adecade’s researchhighlights a critical dissociationbetweenautomatic andcontrolled influencesonmoral...
Moral judgment involves considering not only the outcome of an action but also the intention with wh...
Moral cognition is associated with activation of the default network, regions implicated in mentaliz...
When we judge an action as morally right or wrong, we rely on our capacity to infer the actor's ment...
International audienceThe ability to make judgments about mental states is critical to social intera...
Neuroimaging research has demonstrated the involvement of a well-defined brain network in the mediat...
Judgments about whether an action is morally right or wrong typically depend on our capacity to infe...