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Sleep and moral awareness
Authors:Christopher M. Barnes  Brian C. Gunia  David T. Wagner
Affiliation:1. Foster School of Business, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;2. Carey School of Business, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;3. Lee Kong Chian School of Business, Singapore Management University, Singapore
Abstract:The implications of sleep for morality are only starting to be explored. Extending the ethics literature, we contend that because bringing morality to conscious attention requires effort, a lack of sleep leads to low moral awareness. We test this prediction with three studies. A laboratory study with a manipulation of sleep across 90 participants judging a scenario for moral content indicates that a lack of sleep leads to low moral awareness. An archival study of Google Trends data across 6 years highlights a national dip in Web searches for moral topics (but not other topics) on the Monday after the Spring time change, which tends to deprive people of sleep. Finally, a diary study of 127 participants indicates that (within participants) nights with a lack of sleep are associated with low moral awareness the next day. Together, these three studies suggest that a lack of sleep leaves people less morally aware, with important implications for the recognition of morality in others.
Keywords:behavioural ethics  ethics  moral awareness  sleep
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