Psychology data from an exploration of the effect of anticipatory stress on disgust vs. non-disgust related moral judgments

DOI

Data from a lab-based experiment (N = 185) in which we tested the effect of anticipatory stress on moral condemnation. The data covers severity ratings for vignettes of two content types: vignettes with an inherent disgust-eliciting element (e.g., eating human flesh) and without (e.g., lying on a resume). Participants in the anticipatory stress condition rated the vignettes as more morally wrong, and disgust-eliciting vignettes were rated as more morally wrong. No moderation by disgust content was found. Private Body Consciousness (PBC) was positively associated with condemnation for disgust-eliciting vignettes (but not with non-disgust-eliciting vignettes). The data can be used, for example, in research on incidental vs. inherent emotions, to identify the strength of induced emotions on judgments, and to identify moderators (e.g., PBC).

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Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/EBWMBY
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/EBWMBY
Provenance
Creator Van 't Veer, Anna; Sleegers, Willem
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Van 't Veer, Anna; DataverseNL
Publication Year 2018
Rights CC0 Waiver; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
OpenAccess true
Contact Van 't Veer, Anna (Leiden University)
Representation
Resource Type Miscellaneous; Dataset
Format type/x-r-syntax; application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document; application/pdf; text/csv; text/plain
Size 8111; 11273; 18433; 19178; 40161; 26598; 8974; 2301; 64150; 91927; 152214; 2258; 1533; 131259
Version 1.0
Discipline Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture; Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture and Veterinary Medicine; Life Sciences; Social Sciences; Social and Behavioural Sciences; Soil Sciences