Individuals with a higher level of moral reasoning skills showed
increased gray matter in the areas of the brain implicated in complex
social behavior, decision making, and conflict processing as compared to
subjects at a lower level of moral reasoning, according to new
research.
Moral development research pioneered by psychologist Lawrence
Kohlberg in the mid-20th century shows that people progress through
different stages of moral reasoning as their cognitive abilities mature.
Neuroscience has recently reinvigorated moral psychology by introducing
new methods for studying moral decision-making. However, no study to
date has quantified brain structures supporting individual stages of
moral reasoning.
"To investigate this question, we employed a sample of MBA students
ages 24 to 33, past the age at which structural brain maturation is
complete, and tested their moral reasoning, then looked at the level of
gray matter in the brains of a subset of subjects," said senior author
Hengyi Rao, PhD, a research assistant professor of Cognitive
Neuroimaging in Neurology and Psychiatry in the Perelman School of
Medicine.
"MBA students were ideal candidates for this work, as the Wharton
curriculum addresses issues of moral decision-making and reasoning,"
explained Diana Robertson, PhD, a professor of legal studies and
business ethics at the Wharton School and an author of the study. "We
aimed to investigate whether the stage of moral reasoning is reflected
in structural brain architecture."
A total of 67 MBA students were administered the Defining Issue Test
to determine which pattern of thought or behavior, known as cognitive
schema, each student used when reasoning about moral issues. In it,
students were presented with complex moral dilemmas such as medical
assisted suicide and asked them to choose the relevance of each of 12
given rationales. Based on the results, subjects were then assigned to
one of seven schema types which represent increasing levels of moral
development. Students then underwent MRI scanning to investigate
differences in gray matter volume between students who reached the
post-conventional level of moral reasoning compared to those who have
not reached that level yet.
Subjects also underwent personality testing and were placed into one
of the following categories: neuroticism, extraversion, openness to
experience, conscientiousness, and agreeableness. Analysis showed higher
scores in openness to experience and lower scores in neuroticism for
participants at the more advanced levels of moral development.
With regard to brain structure, the team observed increased gray
matter in the prefrontal cortex in subjects who reached the
post-conventional level of moral reasoning compared to those who are
still at a pre-conventional and conventional level. In other words, gray
matter volume was correlated with the subject's degree of
post-conventional thinking.
"This research adds an investigation of individual differences in
moral reasoning to the expanding landscape of moral neuroscience," Rao
said. "The current findings provide initial evidence for brain
structural difference based on the stages of moral reasoning proposed by
Lawrence Kohlberg decades ago. However, further research will be needed
to determine whether these changes are the cause or the effect of
higher levels of moral reasoning."
This story is taken from Science Daily
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