Content area

Abstract

Recent research has shown that sleep is associated with moral judgment. Most of these studies have focused on moral awareness and unethical behaviors but far fewer have examined the impact of sleep on moral utilitarianism. We report a set of six preregistered cross-sectional studies which explore the association between moral utilitarianism and sleep quantity and quality at both the acute and chronic levels. A total of 582 participants drawn from diverse populations (USA, UK and France) addressed various measures of sleep quantity, sleep quality, and moral utilitarianism. We report a meta-analysis which showed only a weak association between sleep and moral utilitarianism. Despite the heterogeneity in the samples and methods employed, equivalence tests ruled out the possibility that we missed medium to strong effect sizes. We discuss the implication of these findings in the light of the moral judgment literature.

Details

Title
Association of natural sleep with moral utilitarianism: No evidence from 6 preregistered studies
Author
Trémolière, Bastien 1 ; Gosling, Corentin J 2 

 UNIV. NIMES, APSY-V, F-30021 Nîmes Cedex 1, France 
 DysCo Lab, Paris Nanterre University, Nanterre, France 
Pages
1726-1734
Section
BRIEF REPORT
Publication year
2021
Publication date
Oct 2021
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10699384
e-ISSN
15315320
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2581017929
Copyright
Copyright Springer Nature B.V. Oct 2021