TY - JOUR
T1 - Transgressors, victims, and cry babies
T2 - is basic moral judgment spared in autism?
AU - Leslie, Alan M.
AU - Mallon, Ron
AU - DiCorcia, Jennifer A.
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to: Alan M. Leslie, Center for Cognitive Science, Rutgers University, 152 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA. E-mail: aleslie@ruccs.rutgers.edu This research was supported by NSF grant BCS-0079917.
Funding Information:
For helpful discussions, we are grateful to Melanie Killen, Larry Nucci, Elliot Turiel, and other members of the NSF Workshop on Understanding People as Normative Agents: Exploring The Intersection of Morality and Theory of Mind, held at Rutgers University, May 2005 (generously supported by NSF grant BCS-0425397). We are also grateful to Rebecca Saxe, Ken Wexler and other members of the Brain Development and Disorders Group, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, MIT, where parts of this research were presented, and to Larry Nucci and Rebecca Saxe for helpful comments on an earlier draft.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Human social intelligence comprises a wide range of complex cognitive and affective processes that appear to be selectively impaired in autistic spectrum disorders. The study of these neuro-developmental disorders and the study of canonical social intelligence have advanced rapidly over the last twenty years by investigating the two together. Specifically, studies of autism have provided important insights into the nature of "theory of mind" abilities, their normal development and underlying neural systems. At the same time, the idea of impaired development of the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying "theory of mind" has shed new light on the nature of autistic disorders. This general approach is not restricted to the study of impairments but extends to mapping areas of social intelligence that are spared in autism. Here we investigate basic moral judgment and find that it appears to be substantially intact in children with autism who are severely impaired in "theory of mind". At the same time, we extend studies of moral reasoning in normal development by way of a new control task, the "cry baby" task. Cry baby scenarios, in which the distress of the victim is "unreasonable" or "unjustified," do not elicit moral condemnation from normally developing preschoolers or from children with autism. Judgments of moral transgressions in which the victim displays distress are therefore not likely the result of a simple automatic reaction to distress and more likely involve moral reasoning. Mapping the cognitive comorbidity patterns of disordered development must encompass both impairments and sparings because both are needed to make sense of the neural and genetic levels.
AB - Human social intelligence comprises a wide range of complex cognitive and affective processes that appear to be selectively impaired in autistic spectrum disorders. The study of these neuro-developmental disorders and the study of canonical social intelligence have advanced rapidly over the last twenty years by investigating the two together. Specifically, studies of autism have provided important insights into the nature of "theory of mind" abilities, their normal development and underlying neural systems. At the same time, the idea of impaired development of the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying "theory of mind" has shed new light on the nature of autistic disorders. This general approach is not restricted to the study of impairments but extends to mapping areas of social intelligence that are spared in autism. Here we investigate basic moral judgment and find that it appears to be substantially intact in children with autism who are severely impaired in "theory of mind". At the same time, we extend studies of moral reasoning in normal development by way of a new control task, the "cry baby" task. Cry baby scenarios, in which the distress of the victim is "unreasonable" or "unjustified," do not elicit moral condemnation from normally developing preschoolers or from children with autism. Judgments of moral transgressions in which the victim displays distress are therefore not likely the result of a simple automatic reaction to distress and more likely involve moral reasoning. Mapping the cognitive comorbidity patterns of disordered development must encompass both impairments and sparings because both are needed to make sense of the neural and genetic levels.
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U2 - 10.1080/17470910600992197
DO - 10.1080/17470910600992197
M3 - Article
C2 - 18633793
AN - SCOPUS:34547457772
SN - 1747-0919
VL - 1
SP - 270
EP - 283
JO - Social Neuroscience
JF - Social Neuroscience
IS - 3-4
ER -