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Are people really less moral in their foreign language? Proficiency and comprehension matter for the moral foreign language effect in Russian speakers

Are people really less moral in their foreign language? Proficiency and comprehension matter for the moral foreign language effect in Russian speakers
Are people really less moral in their foreign language? Proficiency and comprehension matter for the moral foreign language effect in Russian speakers
Previous work has demonstrated that people are more willing to sacrifice one person to save five in a foreign language (FL) than in their native tongue. This may be due to the FL either reducing concerns about sacrificial harm (deontological inclinations) or increasing concerns about overall outcomes (utilitarian inclinations). Moreover, proficiency in a foreign language (FL) may moderate results. To test these possibilities, we investigated the moral foreign language effect (MFLE) in a novel sample of Russian L1/English FL speakers. We employed process dissociation (PD)—a technique that independently assesses concerns about rejecting harm and maximizing outcomes in sacrificial dilemmas, and we assessed measures of objective and subjective foreign language proficiency and of dilemma comprehension. Results replicated the pattern of increased acceptance of sacrificial harm in FL demonstrated in earlier studies, but a PD analysis showed no evidence of increased concerns for utilitarian outcomes in a FL; instead, this pattern was driven by reduced concerns regarding sacrificial harm. However, people who reported better dilemma comprehension in the FL demonstrated both stronger deontological and utilitarian responding, and people with higher objective proficiency displayed stronger utilitarian responding in the FL than those with lower proficiency. These findings show that utilitarian inclinations are affected by reading dilemmas in a foreign language mainly in low-proficiency speakers, and that while emotional concerns for sacrifice are reduced in FL, better comprehension can increase such concerns as well as concern for outcomes.
1932-6203
e0287789
Kirova, Alena
a6be43e3-221a-42f9-973a-7b3b5a2d7013
Tang, Ying
772e6a4a-ca0a-4546-a651-3558cca5708f
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Kirova, Alena
a6be43e3-221a-42f9-973a-7b3b5a2d7013
Tang, Ying
772e6a4a-ca0a-4546-a651-3558cca5708f
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286

Kirova, Alena, Tang, Ying and Conway, Paul (2023) Are people really less moral in their foreign language? Proficiency and comprehension matter for the moral foreign language effect in Russian speakers. PLoS ONE, 18 (7), e0287789, [e0287789]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0287789).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Previous work has demonstrated that people are more willing to sacrifice one person to save five in a foreign language (FL) than in their native tongue. This may be due to the FL either reducing concerns about sacrificial harm (deontological inclinations) or increasing concerns about overall outcomes (utilitarian inclinations). Moreover, proficiency in a foreign language (FL) may moderate results. To test these possibilities, we investigated the moral foreign language effect (MFLE) in a novel sample of Russian L1/English FL speakers. We employed process dissociation (PD)—a technique that independently assesses concerns about rejecting harm and maximizing outcomes in sacrificial dilemmas, and we assessed measures of objective and subjective foreign language proficiency and of dilemma comprehension. Results replicated the pattern of increased acceptance of sacrificial harm in FL demonstrated in earlier studies, but a PD analysis showed no evidence of increased concerns for utilitarian outcomes in a FL; instead, this pattern was driven by reduced concerns regarding sacrificial harm. However, people who reported better dilemma comprehension in the FL demonstrated both stronger deontological and utilitarian responding, and people with higher objective proficiency displayed stronger utilitarian responding in the FL than those with lower proficiency. These findings show that utilitarian inclinations are affected by reading dilemmas in a foreign language mainly in low-proficiency speakers, and that while emotional concerns for sacrifice are reduced in FL, better comprehension can increase such concerns as well as concern for outcomes.

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Accepted/In Press date: 13 June 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 July 2023
Published date: 10 July 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: The authors thank Mark Schaller for authoring JavaScript code used in the collection of data on Qualtrics, and Steven Reale and John Sarkissian for helping with proofreading and editing. The authors also thank Milana Khachaturova, Sergey Lee, and Alina Nakhodkina for helping with data collection, as well as Melissa Smith, John Sarkissian, Galina Machaeva, and Elena Brandt for help with translation and preparation of study materials. Publisher Copyright: Copyright: © 2023 Kirova et al.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479077
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479077
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 185ba9b0-4cfe-4e2b-bcbe-32385ddb8f3f
ORCID for Paul Conway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4649-6008

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Date deposited: 19 Jul 2023 17:09
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17

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Contributors

Author: Alena Kirova
Author: Ying Tang
Author: Paul Conway ORCID iD

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