From a young age, children understand and enforce moral norms, which are aimed at preserving the rights and welfare of others. Children also distinguish moral norms from other types of norms such as conventional norms, which serve to ensure coordination within social groups or institutions. However, far less is known about the mechanisms driving this differentiation. This article investigates the role of internal arousal in distinguishing moral from conventional norms. In a between-subjects design, 3-year-olds (n = 32), 4-year-olds (n = 34), and undergraduate students (n = 64) watched a video of either a moral norm violation (e.g., destroying another person’s artwork) or a conventional norm violation (e.g., playing a game wrong). Participan...
Whether emotion is a source of moral judgments remains controversial. This study combined neurophysi...
In this paper we address the question how children come to understand normativity through simple for...
Human cooperation is probably supported by our tendency to punish selfishness in others. Social norm...
Moral justifications work, when they do, by invoking values that are shared in the common ground of ...
Recent research has found that children are able to effectively interpret and justify situations of ...
Why are children and adults held to different standards when they commit immoral transgressions? One...
Abstract de póster presentado a First meeting of the SEJyD (Society for the Advancement of Judgment...
The present study investigated the extent to which moral disengagement and the tendency to consider ...
Bullying is a subcategory of aggressive behaviour, especially often repeated and directed toward a p...
This study examined children's and young adults' use of three mental capacity criteria for treating ...
One means by which humans maintain social cooperation is through intervention in third-party transgr...
Research on the role of moral emotions in moral judgment, both in hypothetical dilemmata and in real...
Developmental trajectories and individual differences in 70 American middle-income 2½- to 4-year old...
Proponents of moral nativism argue that our moral values were designed by natural selection to incre...
Previous work makes two conflicting claims about children's developing judgments of the emotions of ...
Whether emotion is a source of moral judgments remains controversial. This study combined neurophysi...
In this paper we address the question how children come to understand normativity through simple for...
Human cooperation is probably supported by our tendency to punish selfishness in others. Social norm...
Moral justifications work, when they do, by invoking values that are shared in the common ground of ...
Recent research has found that children are able to effectively interpret and justify situations of ...
Why are children and adults held to different standards when they commit immoral transgressions? One...
Abstract de póster presentado a First meeting of the SEJyD (Society for the Advancement of Judgment...
The present study investigated the extent to which moral disengagement and the tendency to consider ...
Bullying is a subcategory of aggressive behaviour, especially often repeated and directed toward a p...
This study examined children's and young adults' use of three mental capacity criteria for treating ...
One means by which humans maintain social cooperation is through intervention in third-party transgr...
Research on the role of moral emotions in moral judgment, both in hypothetical dilemmata and in real...
Developmental trajectories and individual differences in 70 American middle-income 2½- to 4-year old...
Proponents of moral nativism argue that our moral values were designed by natural selection to incre...
Previous work makes two conflicting claims about children's developing judgments of the emotions of ...
Whether emotion is a source of moral judgments remains controversial. This study combined neurophysi...
In this paper we address the question how children come to understand normativity through simple for...
Human cooperation is probably supported by our tendency to punish selfishness in others. Social norm...