Results 221 to 230 of about 953,281 (295)
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Moral intuitions, punishment ideology, and judicial sentencing
Journal of Crime and Justice, 2023Considerable research examines discretion in judicial sentencing. However, little is known about the role of moral values or ideological beliefs in judicial sentencing decisions.
Jason R. Silver, Jeffery T. Ulmer
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Material Benefits Crowd Out Moralistic Punishment
Psychology Science, 2022Across four experiments with U.S.-based online participants (N = 1,495 adults), I found that paying people to engage in moralistic punishment reduces their willingness to do so.
T. Rai
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Status and moral education: On the philosophy and psychology of punishment.
Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical PsychologyMichał Kłusek
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The social and psychological costs of punishing
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2012AbstractWe review evidence of the psychological and social costs associated with punishing. We propose that these psychological and social costs should be considered (in addition to material costs) when searching for evidence of costly punishment “in the wild.”
Gabrielle S, Adams, Elizabeth, Mullen
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The Origins and Psychology of Human Cooperation.
Annual Review of Psychology, 2020Humans are an ultrasocial species. This sociality, however, cannot be fully explained by the canonical approaches found in evolutionary biology, psychology, or economics.
J. Henrich, Michael Muthukrishna
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The Social Psychology of Punishment Reactions
1981Social psychologists have devoted considerable attention to exploring the role that considerations of justice play in social behavior. People’s concern with the issue of justice has been shown to affect strongly their interpersonal perceptions (Lerner & Miller, 1978; Walster, Walster, & Berschied, 1978) as well as many of their behavioral reactions ...
Dale T. Miller, Neil Vidmar
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The psychology of punishment and its social implications
Australian Psychologist, 1971(1971). The psychology of punishment and its social implications. Australian Psychologist: Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 4-18.
A. M. Clarke +2 more
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The Influence of Reward and Punishment Systems on Student Discipline
International Journal of Educational NarrativesBackground. The role of reward and punishment systems in shaping student discipline has long been a subject of interest in educational psychology.
Aylin Erdo?an +2 more
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Experimental psychology: event timing turns punishment to reward
e-Neuroforum, 2004Can relief from pain be a pleasure? If so, noxious events should--despite their typically aversive effects--also have a 'rewarding' after-effect. Through training fruitflies by using an electric shock paired with an odour, we show here that the shock can condition either avoidance of this odour or approach to it. These opposing behaviours depend on the
Hiromu, Tanimoto +2 more
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