Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Lurid description of crime affects severity of punishment

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Aug, 2014 08:14 AM
  • Lurid description of crime affects severity of punishment
The manner in which the harmful consequences of an action are described significantly influences the level of punishment that people consider appropriate, but only in cases where the harm was intentional, a brain imaging study shows.
 
When the harm was described in a graphic or lurid fashion, then people set the punishment level higher than when it was described matter-of-factly, the study showed.
 
However, this higher punishment level only applied when the participants considered the resulting harm to be intentional.
 
When they considered it to be unintentional, the way it was described did not have any effect.
 
"What we have shown is that manipulations of gruesome language leads to harsher punishment, but only in cases where the harm was intentional; language had no effect when the harm was caused unintentionally," said lead author of the study Michael Treadway from Harvard Medical School in the US.
 
In the experiment, the brains of 30 volunteers (20 male, 10 female, average age 23 years) were imaged using functional MRI (fMRI) while they read a series of brief scenarios that described how the actions of a protagonist named John brought harm to either Steve or Mary.
 
The scenarios depicted four different levels of harm: death, maiming, physical assault and property damage. In half of them, the harm was clearly identified as intentional and in half it was clearly identified as unintentional.
 
Two versions of each scenario were created: one with a factual description of the harm and the other with a graphic description.
 
They found that the amygdala, an almond-shaped set of neurons that plays a key role in processing emotions, responded most strongly to the graphic language condition.
 
However, this effect in the amygdala was only present when harm was done intentionally.
 
The study appeared in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Menu design can spoil diners' mood

Menu design can spoil diners' mood
According to an interesting research, what you order may have less to do with what you want and more to do with a menu's layout and descriptions....

Menu design can spoil diners' mood

In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable

In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable
Did you feel guilty after having sex for the first time? Take heart as young women today are actually "enjoying losing their virginity" compared to earlier days....

In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable

Infants smell threats by mother's odour

Infants smell threats by mother's odour
Infants can smell fear. They learn to detect threats and remember these for long just by smelling the odour their mother gives off when she feels fear, says a study...

Infants smell threats by mother's odour

Now, predict first impressions

Now, predict first impressions
Now, it is possible to accurately predict first impressions using physical features in everyday facial images such as those found on social media, says a study...

Now, predict first impressions

This is why dogs sniff each other's butts

This is why dogs sniff each other's butts
You may have witnessed this scene on the road quite often but the answer to why dogs sniff each other's butts is hidden in the chemical communication at the rear end....

This is why dogs sniff each other's butts

Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you

Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you
The behaviours like seeing, smelling and sexual arousal that "come naturally and do not have to be learned" occur because of two classes of pheromone...

Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you