Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/37061
Author(s): Adetula, A.
Forscher, P. S.
Basnight-Brown, D.
Wagge, J. R.
Kaliyapa, W. T.
Polycarp, C. G.
Malingumu, W. S.
Azouaghe, S.
Sambu, L.
Ndukaihe, I. L. G.
Adetula, G. A.
Charyate, A.
Ogbonnaya, C. E.
Arinze, N. C.
Shumiye, O. P.
Jack, D. B.
Ouoba, N. M.
Bada, B. V.
Khaoudi, A.
Nhaguilunguana, J.
Dennis, U. D.
Ayoob, A.
Idu, A. V.
Dinala, Y. E.
Adeyefa, A. O.
Ehinmowo, M. I.
Imonigie, A. U. J.
Agboola, G. W.
Daktong, H. A.
Musa, B.
Elouafa, J.
Boua, M.
Kaddouri, M.
Dongkek, B. J.
Grimli, H.
Mouhssine, L.
Eddamnati, H.
Matimbe, T.
IJzerman, D. R.
Muchiri-Muchai, A. W.
Arriaga, P.
Primbs, M. A.
IJzerman, H.
Date: 2026
Title: The evaluation of harm and purity transgressions in Africans: A paradigmatic replication of Rottman and Young (2019)
Journal title: Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
Volume: 9
Number: 2
Reference: Adetula, A., Forscher, P. S., Basnight-Brown, D., Wagge, J. R., Kaliyapa, W. T., Polycarp, C. G., Malingumu, W. S., Azouaghe, S., Sambu, L., Ndukaihe, I. L. G., Adetula, G. A., Charyate, A., Ogbonnaya, C. E., Arinze, N. C., Shumiye, O. P., Jack, D. B., Ouoba, N. M., Bada, B. V., Khaoudi, A., ... IJzerman, H. (2026). The evaluation of harm and purity transgressions in Africans: A paradigmatic replication of Rottman and Young (2019). Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science, 9(2). https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/25152459261428031
ISSN: 2515-2459
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1177/25152459261428031
Keywords: Africa
Diversity
Judgment
Morality
Paradigmatic replication
Open data
Open materials
Preregistration
Abstract: Improving the generalizability of psychology findings to a culture requires sampling participants in that culture. Yet psychology studies rarely sample from Africa even though Africa represents 17% of the global population. Although Africans can leverage the credibility-revolution initiatives to increase rigor and global representation, capacity building might speed the spread of these initiatives. In this study, we investigated an African-wide replication study to test whether Rottman and Young’s “mere-trace” hypothesis of moral reasoning (that people are more sensitive to the dosage of harm-based transgressions than purity transgressions) extends to several African communities. We used a training method developed by the Collaborative Replication and Education Project to train 23 African collaborators. During this process, we conducted a paradigmatic replication of Rottman and Young’s test of the mere-trace hypothesis in 12 contributing African sites from Burkina Faso, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, and Tanzania that sampled 783 participants after exclusions. Consistent with the original claim using U.S. samples, our African participants judged severe harm transgressions as more wrong than less severe ones but were not as sensitive to severity for purity transgressions (Domain × Dose: b = −4.63; p < .01). Moreover, the effect of dosage was smaller than reported among the U.S. sample, and our African participants rated all transgression scenarios more wrong than the U.S. sample. Resource constraints limited our sample to five African countries and to Africans dwelling in urban communities. Moral psychology should transcend the moral issues prioritized in the original study to include those considered important in African societies.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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