Authors
Ron Tamborini, Sujay Prabhu, Robert J Lewis, Matthew Grizzard, Allison Eden
Publication date
2016/8/26
Journal
Journal of Media Psychology
Publisher
Hogrefe Publishing
Description
The model of intuitive morality and exemplars (MIME) predicts that media content can increase the accessibility of preconscious moral intuitions, which shape subsequent moral decision making. To date, attempts to demonstrate evidence of this intuitive, preconscious process with self-report measures have met with little success. The current paper presents results from a study designed to test the MIME’s predictions, measuring the accessibility of moral intuitions with a moral foundations–affect misattribution procedure (MF-AMP) argued in the current paper to be more capable of detecting the aforementioned effect. An experiment manipulated exposure to media content that focused on care and fairness to test the proposition that media content can increase the accessibility of these moral intuitions. The findings offer preliminary evidence supporting the MIME’s proposition that media content featuring behaviors …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Tamborini, S Prabhu, RJ Lewis, M Grizzard, A Eden - Journal of Media Psychology, 2016