Jessica M Salerno, Samantha R Bean, Nicholas D Duran, Alia N Wulff, Isabelle Reeder, Saul M Kassin
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Using both real and tightly controlled simulated 911 calls, we demonstrated that failing to express the expected level of emotion on a 911 call reporting a violent crime led laypeople and police to morally typecast the caller as more of a moral agent capable of perpetrating immoral acts and less of a moral patient capable of being the victim of immoral acts-ultimately increasing suspicion that they were involved in the crime and support for treating them as a suspect. We advance moral psychological theory by demonstrating that failing to express expected levels of emotion about a moral violation can shape moral inferences about someone's capacity to commit versus be the victim of moral wrongs, thereby generating suspicion that they might have engaged in wrongdoing. We demonstrated this theory in criminal settings to explain how one tragedy can become two: altruistic witnesses calling 911 to plead for help on behalf of another person becoming suspects of the crime they reported because they failed to exhibit the expected emotional demeanor. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":16691,"journal":{"name":"Journal of personality and social psychology","volume":" ","pages":"765-789"},"PeriodicalIF":6.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Failing to express emotion on 911 calls triggers suspicion through violating expectations and moral typecasting.\",\"authors\":\"Jessica M Salerno, Samantha R Bean, Nicholas D Duran, Alia N Wulff, Isabelle Reeder, Saul M Kassin\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/pspa0000412\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Coming to suspect that someone has engaged in wrongdoing based on their unexpected behavior is a common phenomenon-yet, little is known about what triggers initial suspicion. We investigated how violating expectations for high emotionality during a traumatic event can trigger suspicion that one has engaged in immoral-or even criminal-activity through moral typecasting. Five studies demonstrate this theory in a criminal context with dire real-world consequences: 911 callers reporting violent crimes generating suspicion by exhibiting unexpected behavior, which could trigger confirmation bias in investigations leading to wrongful convictions. Using both real and tightly controlled simulated 911 calls, we demonstrated that failing to express the expected level of emotion on a 911 call reporting a violent crime led laypeople and police to morally typecast the caller as more of a moral agent capable of perpetrating immoral acts and less of a moral patient capable of being the victim of immoral acts-ultimately increasing suspicion that they were involved in the crime and support for treating them as a suspect. We advance moral psychological theory by demonstrating that failing to express expected levels of emotion about a moral violation can shape moral inferences about someone's capacity to commit versus be the victim of moral wrongs, thereby generating suspicion that they might have engaged in wrongdoing. We demonstrated this theory in criminal settings to explain how one tragedy can become two: altruistic witnesses calling 911 to plead for help on behalf of another person becoming suspects of the crime they reported because they failed to exhibit the expected emotional demeanor. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
基于意想不到的行为而怀疑某人从事不法行为是一种普遍现象——然而,很少有人知道是什么引发了最初的怀疑。我们调查了在创伤性事件中违反对高情绪的期望是如何通过道德模式化引发人们对从事不道德甚至犯罪活动的怀疑的。五项研究在犯罪背景下证明了这一理论,并带来了可怕的现实后果:拨打911的人报告暴力犯罪时,会表现出意想不到的行为,从而产生怀疑,这可能会引发调查中的确认偏见,导致错误的定罪。使用真实和严格控制的模拟911个电话,我们表明,未能表达情感的预期水平在911叫报道暴力犯罪导致非专业人员和警察道德定型调用者的道德代理人能够犯下不道德行为和道德的病人能够不道德的受害者acts-ultimately越来越怀疑他们参与犯罪和支持将他们作为一个嫌疑犯。我们推进道德心理学理论,通过证明未能表达对道德违反的预期情绪水平,可以形成关于某人犯下道德错误的能力与成为道德错误受害者的道德推断,从而产生他们可能从事不法行为的怀疑。我们在犯罪环境中证明了这一理论,以解释一个悲剧是如何变成两个悲剧的:无私的目击者拨打911请求帮助,代表另一个人成为犯罪嫌疑人,因为他们没有表现出预期的情绪举止。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Failing to express emotion on 911 calls triggers suspicion through violating expectations and moral typecasting.
Coming to suspect that someone has engaged in wrongdoing based on their unexpected behavior is a common phenomenon-yet, little is known about what triggers initial suspicion. We investigated how violating expectations for high emotionality during a traumatic event can trigger suspicion that one has engaged in immoral-or even criminal-activity through moral typecasting. Five studies demonstrate this theory in a criminal context with dire real-world consequences: 911 callers reporting violent crimes generating suspicion by exhibiting unexpected behavior, which could trigger confirmation bias in investigations leading to wrongful convictions. Using both real and tightly controlled simulated 911 calls, we demonstrated that failing to express the expected level of emotion on a 911 call reporting a violent crime led laypeople and police to morally typecast the caller as more of a moral agent capable of perpetrating immoral acts and less of a moral patient capable of being the victim of immoral acts-ultimately increasing suspicion that they were involved in the crime and support for treating them as a suspect. We advance moral psychological theory by demonstrating that failing to express expected levels of emotion about a moral violation can shape moral inferences about someone's capacity to commit versus be the victim of moral wrongs, thereby generating suspicion that they might have engaged in wrongdoing. We demonstrated this theory in criminal settings to explain how one tragedy can become two: altruistic witnesses calling 911 to plead for help on behalf of another person becoming suspects of the crime they reported because they failed to exhibit the expected emotional demeanor. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Journal of personality and social psychology publishes original papers in all areas of personality and social psychology and emphasizes empirical reports, but may include specialized theoretical, methodological, and review papers.Journal of personality and social psychology is divided into three independently edited sections. Attitudes and Social Cognition addresses all aspects of psychology (e.g., attitudes, cognition, emotion, motivation) that take place in significant micro- and macrolevel social contexts.