[LINK] People become more utilitarian in VR moral dilemmas as compared to text based.

3 trifith 09 January 2014 08:28PM

A new study indicates that people become more utilitarian (save more lives) when viewing a moral dilemma in a virtual reality situation, as compared to reading the same situation in text.

Abstract.

Although research in moral psychology in the last decade has relied heavily on hypothetical moral dilemmas and has been effective in understanding moral judgment, how these judgments translate into behaviors remains a largely unexplored issue due to the harmful nature of the acts involved. To study this link, we follow a new approach based on a desktop virtual reality environment. In our within-subjects experiment, participants exhibited an order-dependent judgment-behavior discrepancy across temporally-separated sessions, with many of them behaving in utilitarian manner in virtual reality dilemmas despite their non-utilitarian judgments for the same dilemmas in textual descriptions. This change in decisions reflected in the autonomic arousal of participants, with dilemmas in virtual reality being perceived more emotionally arousing than the ones in text, after controlling for general differences between the two presentation modalities (virtual reality vs. text). This suggests that moral decision-making in hypothetical moral dilemmas is susceptible to contextual saliency of the presentation of these dilemmas.

Full paper

Video of simulations

Comment author: ArisKatsaris 03 January 2014 10:54:33AM 0 points [-]

Which thread in /r/Bitcoin?

Comment author: trifith 06 January 2014 09:51:12PM 1 point [-]
Comment author: trifith 27 December 2013 02:39:49PM 1 point [-]

I have posted this to /r/bitcoin, so as to allow the market to learn of this proposed inefficiency, and thus remove it, should it in fact exist.

Comment author: trifith 13 November 2013 09:15:24PM 5 points [-]

Your link to the study hall is broken. The study hall can be found here.

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