PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

People attribute minds to robots, corpses that are targets of harm

2013-06-17
(Press-News.org) As Descartes famously noted, there's no way to really know that another person has a mind — every mind we observe is, in a sense, a mind we create. Now, new research suggests that victimization may be one condition that leads us to perceive minds in others, even in entities we don't normally think of as having minds.

This research, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, shows that people attribute minds to entities they perceive as being targets of harm, even when the entity in question is a robot or a corpse.

"People seem to believe that having a mind allows an entity to be part of a moral interaction — to do good and bad things, or to have good and bad things done to them," says psychological scientist Adrian Ward, who conducted the research at Harvard University.

"This research suggests that the relationship may actually work the other way around: Minds don't create morality, morality creates minds."

Ward, together with Daniel Wegner of Harvard University and Andrew Olsen of the University of Pennsylvania, conducted five studies that investigated the relationship between morality and mind. The results consistently revealed that participants attributed 'more' mind to entities portrayed as targets of intentional harm.

For example, participants who read a story about a nurse who intentionally unplugged the food supply to a patient in a persistent vegetative state attributed more mind to the patient than those who read that the nurse performed her job satisfactorily. Participants also attributed more mind to a corpse when they read that it had been the target of harm.

Participants even attributed more mind to a George, a "highly complex social robot," when they read that George had been stabbed with a scalpel by a research scientist.

Surprisingly, people attributed "full" minds to entities when they were the targets of moral harm — minds capable not just of experiencing harm, but also capable of experiencing emotions, feeling hunger, exerting self-control, and planning for the future.

Ward believes that the findings may help to explain how two people can look at the same entity — for example, a fetus, a comatose patient, a gorilla, or a lab rat — and see completely different capacities for thinking, feeling, and general consciousness:

"When these entities are thought of in moral terms, they're attributed more mind — it seems that people have the sense that something wrong is happening, so someone must be there to receive that wrong."

Importantly, the results of the final study suggest that the effects of harm may depend on the preexisting mental status of the victim in question.

Participants who read that Sharon, a fully conscious adult human, was physically abused by her boss attributed less mind to Sharon than participants who read that her boss behaved normally. They attributed less ability to experience pain and less mind overall to Sharon, falling in line with previous research on dehumanization.

"Victimization may cause people to dehumanize other entities — but only when these entities have a mind to begin with; entities with absent or liminal minds, in contrast, seem to gain minds as a result of victimization," the researchers write.

The research may have implications for hot-button issues centered on morality and mind, including issues surrounding animal rights, abortion, and end-of-life decisions. If moral intuitions lead to subjective perceptions of minds, investigating the objective realities of mental capacities is unlikely to resolve moral disagreements over what the 'right' course of action is.

Ward hopes to further explore how the so-called harm-made mind might influence actual decision making:

"Exploring this relationship will allow us to understand how different ways of presenting and discussing information about minds and morality may help people see eye-to-eye on contentious issues, and potentially come to a place of mutual understanding."

### For more information about this study, please contact: Adrian F. Ward at award@fas.harvard.edu.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "The Harm-Made Mind: Observing Victimization Augments Attribution of Minds to Vegetative Patients, Robots, and the Dead" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Teaching and safety-net hospitals show variations in quality and outcomes of care

2013-06-17
Philadelphia, Pa. (June 17, 2013) – Teaching hospitals with a higher intensity of physician-training activity achieve lower mortality rates, but higher hospitalization readmission rates for key medical diagnoses, reports a study in the July issue of Medical Care, published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health. The disparity in readmissions is greatest for "safety-net" hospitals serving low-income populations, according to the new research led by Dr Stephanie K. Mueller of Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston. They write, "These findings ...

Is there an invisible tug-of-war behind bad hearts and power outages?

2013-06-17
VIDEO: Researchers from Princeton University and Germany's Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization report the first purely physical experimental evidence that chimera states can occur naturally within any process that... Click here for more information. Systems such as a beating heart or a power grid that depend on the synchronized movement of their parts could fall prey to an invisible and chaotic tug-of-war known as a "chimera." Sharing its name with the fire-breathing, ...

Medical assessment in the blink of an eye

2013-06-17
Have you ever thought that you knew something about the world in the blink of an eye? This restaurant is not the right place for dinner. That person could be The One. It turns out that radiologists can do this with mammograms, the x-ray images used for breast cancer screening. Cytologists, who screen micrographic images of cervical cells to detect cervical cancer, have a similar ability. A new study, published in Springer's journal Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, takes a closer look at the skill these specialists have. There are many routes to making snap judgments (not ...

New alternative to surgery lets doctors remove suspicious polyps, keep colon intact

2013-06-17
Millions of people each year have polyps successfully removed during colonoscopies. But when a suspicious polyp is bigger than a marble or in a hard-to-reach location, patients are referred for surgery to remove a portion of their colon — even if doctors aren't sure whether the polyp is cancerous or not. Since only 15 percent of all polyps turn out to be malignant, many patients are unnecessarily subjected to the risks of this major surgery. Now there is an alternative. A UCLA team of surgeons and gastroenterologists has been performing a new, minimally invasive ...

Bullfrogs may help spread deadly amphibian fungus, but also die from it

2013-06-17
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Amphibian populations are declining worldwide and a major cause is a deadly fungus thought to be spread by bullfrogs, but a two-year study shows they can also die from this pathogen, contrary to suggestions that bullfrogs are a tolerant carrier host that just spreads the disease. When researchers raised the frogs from eggs in controlled experimental conditions, they found at least one strain of this pathogen, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, also called Bd or a chytrid fungus, can be fatal to year-old juveniles. However, bullfrogs were resistant to one ...

Study identifies protein essential for normal heart function

2013-06-17
A study by researchers at Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and the Department of Pharmacology at the University of California, San Diego, shows that a protein called MCL-1, which promotes cell survival, is essential for normal heart function. Their study, published in the June 15 online issue of the journal Genes & Development, found that deletion of the gene encoding MCL-1 in adult mouse hearts led to rapid heart failure within two weeks, and death within a month. MCL-1 (myeloid cell leukemia-1) is an anti-apoptotic protein, meaning that it prevents ...

'Chemical architects' build materials with potential applications in drug delivery and gas storage

2013-06-17
PITTSBURGH—Home remodelers understand the concept of improving original foundations with more modern elements. Using this same approach—but with chemistry—researchers in the University of Pittsburgh's Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences have designed a family of materials that could make drug delivery, gas storage, and gas transport more efficient and at a lower cost. The findings were reported in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS). The recent work builds upon Pitt Associate Professor of Chemistry Nathaniel Rosi's earlier ...

Rare genomic mutations found in 10 families with early-onset, familial Alzheimer's disease

2013-06-17
Although a family history of Alzheimer's disease is a primary risk factor for the devastating neurological disorder, mutations in only three genes – the amyloid precursor protein and presenilins 1 and 2 – have been established as causative for inherited, early-onset Alzheimer's, accounting for about half of such cases. Now Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers have discovered a type of mutation known as copy-number variants (CNVs) – deletions, duplications, or rearrangements of human genomic DNA – in affected members of 10 families with early-onset Alzheimer's. ...

Obese male mice father offspring with higher levels of body fat

2013-06-17
SAN FRANCISCO (June 16, 2013)—Male mice who were fed a high-fat diet and became obese were more likely to father offspring who also had higher levels of body fat, a new Ohio University study finds. The effect was observed primarily in male offspring, despite their consumption of a low-fat diet, scientists reported today at the annual meeting of The Endocrine Society in San Francisco, Calif. "We've identified a number of traits that may affect metabolism and behavior of offspring dependent on the pre-conception diet of the father," said Felicia Nowak, an associate professor ...

'Chase and run' cell movement mechanism explains process of metastasis

2013-06-17
A mechanism that cells use to group together and move around the body – called 'chase and run' - has been described for the first time by scientists at UCL. Published in Nature Cell Biology, the new study focuses on the process that occurs when cancer cells interact with healthy cells in order to migrate around the body during metastasis. Scientists know that cancer cells recruit healthy cells and use them to travel long distances, but how this process takes place and how it could be controlled to design new therapies against cancer remains unknown. Now, using embryonic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New study finds social programs could reduce the spread of HIV by 29%

SIDS discovery could ID babies at risk of sudden death

Ozone exposure linked to hypoxia and arterial stiffness

Princeton Chemistry develops copper-detection tool to discover possible chelation target for lung cancer

Drug candidate eliminates breast cancer tumors in mice in a single dose

WSU study shows travelers are dreaming forward, not looking back

Black immigrants attract white residents to neighborhoods

Hot or cold? How the brain deciphers thermal sensations

Green tea-based adhesive films show promise as a novel treatment for oral mucositis

Single-cell elemental analysis using Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS)

BioChatter: making large language models accessible for biomedical research

Grass surfaces drastically reduce drone noise making the way for soundless city skies

Extent of microfibre pollution from textiles to be explored at new research hub

Many Roads Lead to… the embryo

Dining out with San Francisco’s coyotes

What’s the mechanism behind behavioral side effects of popular weight loss drugs?

How employee trust in AI drives performance and adoption

Does sleep apnea treatment influence patients’ risk of getting into car accidents?

Do minimum wage hikes negatively impact students’ summer employment?

Exposure to stress during early pregnancy affects offspring into adulthood

Curious blue rings in trees and shrubs reveal cold summers of the past — potentially caused by volcanic eruptions

New frontiers in organic chemistry: Synthesis of a promising mushroom-derived compound

Biodegradable nylon precursor produced through artificial photosynthesis

GenEditScan: novel k-mer analysis tool based on next-generation sequencing for foreign DNA detection in genome-edited products

Survey: While most Americans use a device to monitor their heart, few share that data with their doctor

Dolphins use a 'fat taste' system to get their mother’s milk

Clarifying the mechanism of coupled plasma fluctuations using simulations

Here’s what’s causing the Great Salt Lake to shrink, according to PSU study

Can DNA-nanoparticle motors get up to speed with motor proteins?

Childhood poverty and/or parental mental illness may double teens’ risk of violence and police contact

[Press-News.org] People attribute minds to robots, corpses that are targets of harm