From Moral to Legal Judgment: The Influence of Normative Context in Lawyers and other Academics
Social Cognitive and Effective Neuroscience, DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsq010, 2010.
Stephan
Schleim, Tade
M. Spranger, Susanne
Erk, Henrik
Walter
Various kinds of normative judgments are
an integral part of everyday life. We extended the scrutiny of social
cognitive neuroscience
into the domain of legal decisions, investigating
two groups, lawyers and other academics, during moral and legal
decision-making.
While we found activation of brain areas comprising
the so-called ‘moral brain’ in both conditions, there was stronger
activation
in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and
middle temporal gyrus particularly when subjects made legal decisions,
suggesting
that these were made in respect to more explicit
rules and demanded more complex semantic processing. Comparing both
groups,
our data show that behaviorally lawyers conceived
themselves as emotionally less involved during normative decision-making
in general. A group × condition interaction in the
dorsal anterior cingulate cortex suggests a modulation of normative
decision-making
by attention based on subjects’ normative
expertise.
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