Does it matter who harmed whom? A cross-cultural study of moral judgments about harm by and to insiders and outsiders
Curr Psychol. 2024;43(9):7997-8007. doi: 10.1007/s12144-023-04986-3. Epub 2023 Jul 22.ABSTRACTThis cross-cultural study compared judgments of moral wrongness for physical and emotional harm with varying combinations of in-group vs. out-group agents and victims across six countries: the United States of America (N = 937), the United Kingdom (N = 995), Romania (N = 782), Brazil (N = 856), South Korea (N = 1776), and China (N = 1008). Consistent with our hypothesis we found evidence of an insider agent effect, where moral violations committed by outsider agents are generally considered more morally wrong than the same violati...
Source: Current Psychology - March 29, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Paul McKee Hyo-Eun Kim Honghong Tang Jim A C Everett Vladimir Chituc Toni Gibea Lucas Murrins Marques Paulo Boggio Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Source Type: research

Does it matter who harmed whom? A cross-cultural study of moral judgments about harm by and to insiders and outsiders
Curr Psychol. 2024;43(9):7997-8007. doi: 10.1007/s12144-023-04986-3. Epub 2023 Jul 22.ABSTRACTThis cross-cultural study compared judgments of moral wrongness for physical and emotional harm with varying combinations of in-group vs. out-group agents and victims across six countries: the United States of America (N = 937), the United Kingdom (N = 995), Romania (N = 782), Brazil (N = 856), South Korea (N = 1776), and China (N = 1008). Consistent with our hypothesis we found evidence of an insider agent effect, where moral violations committed by outsider agents are generally considered more morally wrong than the same violati...
Source: Current Psychology - March 29, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Paul McKee Hyo-Eun Kim Honghong Tang Jim A C Everett Vladimir Chituc Toni Gibea Lucas Murrins Marques Paulo Boggio Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Source Type: research

Chemotherapy response score no longer predicts survival outcomes in high-grade serous ovarian cancer patients with < em > BRCA < /em > mutation and/or maintenance therapy
CONCLUSION: CRS may not be a prognostic factor in patients with BRCA mutations and those receiving frontline maintenance therapy.PMID:38551024 | DOI:10.3802/jgo.2024.35.e73 (Source: Journal of Gynecologic Oncology)
Source: Journal of Gynecologic Oncology - March 29, 2024 Category: OBGYN Authors: Young Joo Lee Yoon Kyung Shin Nae Ry Kim Se Ik Kim Yoo-Young Lee Jeong-Yeol Park Jae-Weon Kim Hyun-Woong Cho Jung-Yun Lee Source Type: research

Does it matter who harmed whom? A cross-cultural study of moral judgments about harm by and to insiders and outsiders
Curr Psychol. 2024;43(9):7997-8007. doi: 10.1007/s12144-023-04986-3. Epub 2023 Jul 22.ABSTRACTThis cross-cultural study compared judgments of moral wrongness for physical and emotional harm with varying combinations of in-group vs. out-group agents and victims across six countries: the United States of America (N = 937), the United Kingdom (N = 995), Romania (N = 782), Brazil (N = 856), South Korea (N = 1776), and China (N = 1008). Consistent with our hypothesis we found evidence of an insider agent effect, where moral violations committed by outsider agents are generally considered more morally wrong than the same violati...
Source: Current Psychology - March 29, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Paul McKee Hyo-Eun Kim Honghong Tang Jim A C Everett Vladimir Chituc Toni Gibea Lucas Murrins Marques Paulo Boggio Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Source Type: research

Does it matter who harmed whom? A cross-cultural study of moral judgments about harm by and to insiders and outsiders
Curr Psychol. 2024;43(9):7997-8007. doi: 10.1007/s12144-023-04986-3. Epub 2023 Jul 22.ABSTRACTThis cross-cultural study compared judgments of moral wrongness for physical and emotional harm with varying combinations of in-group vs. out-group agents and victims across six countries: the United States of America (N = 937), the United Kingdom (N = 995), Romania (N = 782), Brazil (N = 856), South Korea (N = 1776), and China (N = 1008). Consistent with our hypothesis we found evidence of an insider agent effect, where moral violations committed by outsider agents are generally considered more morally wrong than the same violati...
Source: Current Psychology - March 29, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Paul McKee Hyo-Eun Kim Honghong Tang Jim A C Everett Vladimir Chituc Toni Gibea Lucas Murrins Marques Paulo Boggio Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Source Type: research