Right or wrong? The brain's fast response to morally objectionable statements

Publication date

2009

Authors

van Berkum, JosISNI 0000000002078160
Holleman, BregjeISNI 0000000116758332
Nieuwland, M.
Otten, M.
Murre, J.J.M.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

How does the brain respond to statements that clash with a person's value system? We recorded event-related brain potentials while respondents from contrasting political-ethical backgrounds completed an attitude survey on drugs, medical ethics, social conduct, and other issues. Our results show that value-based disagreement is unlocked by language extremely rapidly, within 200 to 250 ms after the first word that indicates a clash with the reader's value system (e.g., “I think euthanasia is an acceptable/unacceptable…”). Furthermore, strong disagreement rapidly influences the ongoing analysis of meaning, which indicates that even very early processes in language comprehension are sensitive to a person's value system. Our results testify to rapid reciprocal links between neural systems for language and for valuation.

Keywords

Taverne, International (English)

Citation

van Berkum, J J A, Holleman, B C, Nieuwland, M, Otten, M & Murre, J J M 2009, 'Right or wrong? The brain's fast response to morally objectionable statements', Psychological Science, vol. 20, no. 9, pp. 1092-1099. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02411.x