Weippert, Matthias and Rickler, Michel and Kluck, Steffen and Behrens, Kristin and Bastian, Manuela and Mau-Moeller, Anett and Bruhn, Sven and Lischke, Alexander (2018) It's Harder to Push, When I Have to Push Hard—Physical Exertion and Fatigue Changes Reasoning and Decision-Making on Hypothetical Moral Dilemmas in Males. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 12. ISSN 1662-5153
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Abstract
Despite the prevalence of physical exertion and fatigue during military, firefighting and disaster medicine operations, sports or even daily life, their acute effects on moral reasoning and moral decision-making have never been systematically investigated. To test the effects of physical exertion on moral reasoning and moral decision-making, we administered a moral dilemma task to 32 male participants during a moderate or high intensity cycling intervention. Participants in the high intensity cycling group tended to show more non-utilitarian reasoning and more non-utilitarian decision-making on impersonal but not on personal dilemmas than participants in the moderate intensity cycling group. Exercise-induced exertion and fatigue, thus, shifted moral reasoning and moral decision-making in a non-utilitarian rather than utilitarian direction, presumably due to an exercise-induced limitation of prefrontally mediated executive resources that are more relevant for utilitarian than non-utilitarian reasoning and decision-making.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Open Asian Library > Medical Science |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@openasianlibrary.com |
Date Deposited: | 16 Feb 2023 10:17 |
Last Modified: | 28 Oct 2024 08:18 |
URI: | http://publications.eprintglobalarchived.com/id/eprint/428 |