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1.
Cognition ; 212: 104644, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33901881

ABSTRACT

Many people find it morally impermissible to put kidneys, jury duty exemptions, or permits for having children on the free market. All of these are examples of repugnant transactions-market transactions that third parties want to prevent. In two studies (N = 1,554), using respondents' judgments of 51 different market transactions across 21 characteristics, we show that repugnance can be decomposed into five higher-order dimensions: moral outrage, need for regulation, incommensurability, exploitation, and unknown risk. Repugnance toward the 51 market transactions was highly consistent across two samples. Our results can help identify mismatches between public sentiments and current regulations (selling carbon emissions is currently legal but considered repugnant), anticipate responses to novel markets that have not been publicly scrutinized (often arising from technological advances, such as markets for "designer babies"), and help design less repugnant markets (e.g., by making the risks involved in a transaction known to sellers).


Subject(s)
Commerce , Morals , Child , Humans
2.
PLoS One ; 15(1): e0227898, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32005037

ABSTRACT

Millions of volunteers take part in clinical trials every year. This is unsurprising, given that clinical trials are often much more lucrative than other types of unskilled work. When clinical trials offer very high pay, however, some people consider them repugnant. To understand why, we asked 1,428 respondents to evaluate a hypothetical medical trial for a new Ebola vaccine offering three different payment amounts. Some respondents (27%) used very high pay (£10,000) as a cue to infer the potential risks the clinical trial posed. These respondents were also concerned that offering £10,000 was coercive- simply too profitable to pass up. Both perceived risk and coercion in high-paying clinical trials shape how people evaluate these trials. This result was robust within and between respondents. The link between risk and repugnance may generalize to other markets in which parties are partially remunerated for the risk they take and contributes to a more complete understanding of why some market transactions appear repugnant.


Subject(s)
Clinical Trials as Topic/psychology , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/epidemiology , Volunteers/psychology , Clinical Trials as Topic/economics , Ebola Vaccines/economics , Ebola Vaccines/therapeutic use , Female , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/psychology , Humans , Male , Risk Assessment , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/economics
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