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Explication of moral disgust: assessing physiological and behavioral responses to disgust eliciting videos

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@ University of Mississippi Libraries

Scott, Sarah Michelle

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Results indicate a significant self-reported disgust response among core animal reminder and contamination domains whereas the moral domains elicited both anger and disgust. Physiologically no change was measured in skin conductance; heart rate decrease in response to animal reminder contamination community and autonomy video clips. Significant behavioral avoidance was demonstrated when presented with the core and animal reminder video clips. Further when measuring facial muscle activation the levator labii was significantly activated in response to the core video clip but no others. The current study highlights the difficulty in establishing characteristic responses to disgust stimuli especially within the moral domain. However it is evident that the moral domain video clips do elicit a mixed emotional response primarily anger and disgust. This finding further establishes the complexity of the domain and supports future research focusing on the incorporation of additional physiological measures as well as parsing out additional emotional responses. The emotion disgust consists of four domains: core animal reminder contamination and moral. Moral disgust is a relatively new concept and characterized by moral violations of community autonomy and divinity. The CAD triad hypothesis proposes that the moral emotions of contempt anger and disgust correspond with the aforementioned violations respectively. Disgust like all emotions is comprised of three components: cognitive physiological and behavioral. The current study examined individuals cognitive (self-report) physiological (skin conductance; heart rate) and behavioral (avoidance; facial muscle activation) responses when exposed to disgust eliciting videos specifically to explicate the moral domain. Participants were 108 undergraduate students (62% female)...
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Created Date:
2019 01 01 T08:00:00 Z
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University of Mississippi Libraries