Investigating moral judgements in autistic children: integrating the observer’s and the speaker’s mind
View/ Open
Impact
Scholar |
Other documents of the author: Garcia-Molina, Irene; Clemente Estevan, Rosa Ana; Andrés-Roqueta, Clara
Metadata
Show full item recordcomunitat-uji-handle:10234/9
comunitat-uji-handle2:10234/8034
comunitat-uji-handle3:10234/8637
comunitat-uji-handle4:
INVESTIGACIONMetadata
Title
Investigating moral judgements in autistic children: integrating the observer’s and the speaker’s mindDate
2020-12-07Publisher
Routledge; European Society for Cognitive Psychology (ESCOP)ISSN
2044-5911Bibliographic citation
GARCIA-MOLINA, Irene; CLEMENTE-ESTEVAN, Rosa-Ana; ANDRÉS-ROQUETA, Clara. Investigating moral judgements in autistic children: integrating the observer’s and the speaker’s mind. Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 2020, p. 1-15.Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articlePublisher version
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/20445911.2020.1856120Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersionSubject
Abstract
This study investigates the moral judgements that autistic children make in everyday situations. Moral Transgressions (MT) and Faux Pas (FP) stories were compared, in which stories the agent’s morality and intention ... [+]
This study investigates the moral judgements that autistic children make in everyday situations. Moral Transgressions (MT) and Faux Pas (FP) stories were compared, in which stories the agent’s morality and intention varied (MT: bad, FP: good), and were divided by the mediator (personal / material). Thirty autistic and 32 neurotypical children answered forced-choice questions. The two groups did not differ significantly when responding to either the MT or the FP questions. In between-group comparisons, the autistic group found difficulties in understanding the MT stories when the action directly affected another person (personal mediator). Comparisons between agent’s morality and intention variables revealed that autistic children judged the morality of the agent in FP stories as severe as in the MT task, even when the agent’s intention was understood. These subtle problems could shed some light on how autistic individuals would judge social situations, from the lack of a robust ToM to difficulties being socially flexible. [-]
Investigation project
Val i + D ; UJI-A2016-12Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
This item appears in the folowing collection(s)
- PSI_Articles [595]