Results 271 to 280 of about 987,775 (348)
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Korean Association of Criminal Psychology, 2023
As the cyber world, such as the surrealism-oriented metaverse, is approaching, you will have a new experience that is different from before. On the contrary, this means that crimes like real life will be done as if they are real in cyberspace ...
Han-ho Park, Dong Hyeon Kim
semanticscholar +1 more source
As the cyber world, such as the surrealism-oriented metaverse, is approaching, you will have a new experience that is different from before. On the contrary, this means that crimes like real life will be done as if they are real in cyberspace ...
Han-ho Park, Dong Hyeon Kim
semanticscholar +1 more source
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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Punishment and blame: How core beliefs affect support for the use of force in a nuclear crisis
Conflict Management and Peace Science, 2023How do Americans’ core beliefs about punishment, and their intuitions about which actors deserve blame, shape attitudes toward the use of force against a hostile state?
Lisa Langdon Koch
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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 Psychology of Guilt and Redemption in Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
International Journal of Research in Social Sciences & HumanitiesThe paper takes Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment as a point of departure to think about guilt and redemption within the human being. In Raskolnikov, the presence and absence of these conflicting forces of guilt and redemption bring everyone ...
Abbas Jaafar Mutar
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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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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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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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On the Psychology of Punishment
Supreme Court Economic Review, 2004Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer from serious problems. Jurors are intuitive retributivists, in a way that produces departures from economic theories of punishment. Their decisions are rooted in outrage, which they cannot easily translate into dollar terms.
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