JOURNAL ARTICLE
Study Results from Southwest University Update Understanding of Psychology (The "moral neutrality pattern" of individuals with indirect multicultural experiences in immoral and moral judgments: behavioral and neural evidence).
Published In: Psychology & Psychiatry Journal, 2024. P. 275 1 of 2
Database: Psychology Source 2 of 2
Abstract
A recent study from Southwest University explores the "moral neutrality pattern" in individuals with indirect multicultural experiences, suggesting that they may perceive immoral actions as less immoral and moral actions as less moral. The research, funded by The Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing of China and The Major Project For Key Research Institutes of Humanities And Social Science By The Ministry of Education of China, found that individuals with high multicultural experiences expressed less praise for slightly moral conditions compared to those with low multicultural experiences. The study provides preliminary behavioral and neural evidence for this moral neutrality pattern, contributing to the understanding of how individuals with indirect multicultural experiences form complete moral judgments in today's globalized world. [Extracted from the article]
Additional Information
- Source:Psychology & Psychiatry Journal. 2024/11, p275
- Document Type:Article
- Subject Area:Religion and Philosophy
- Publication Date:2024
- ISSN:1944-2718
- Accession Number:181027259
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