<HashMap><database>biostudies-literature</database><scores/><additional><omics_type>Unknown</omics_type><volume>12</volume><submitter>Weippert M</submitter><pubmed_abstract>Despite the prevalence of physical exertion and fatigue during military, firefighting and disaster medicine operations, sports or even daily life, their acute effects on moral reasoning and moral decision-making have never been systematically investigated. To test the effects of physical exertion on moral reasoning and moral decision-making, we administered a moral dilemma task to 32 male participants during a moderate or high intensity cycling intervention. Participants in the high intensity cycling group tended to show more non-utilitarian reasoning and more non-utilitarian decision-making on impersonal but not on personal dilemmas than participants in the moderate intensity cycling group. Exercise-induced exertion and fatigue, thus, shifted moral reasoning and moral decision-making in a non-utilitarian rather than utilitarian direction, presumably due to an exercise-induced limitation of prefrontally mediated executive resources that are more relevant for utilitarian than non-utilitarian reasoning and decision-making.</pubmed_abstract><journal>Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience</journal><pagination>268</pagination><full_dataset_link>https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biostudies/studies/S-EPMC6276357</full_dataset_link><repository>biostudies-literature</repository><pubmed_title>It's Harder to Push, When I Have to Push Hard-Physical Exertion and Fatigue Changes Reasoning and Decision-Making on Hypothetical Moral Dilemmas in Males.</pubmed_title><pmcid>PMC6276357</pmcid><pubmed_authors>Rickler M</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Kluck S</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Lischke A</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Mau-Moeller A</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Behrens K</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Weippert M</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Bastian M</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Bruhn S</pubmed_authors></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>It's Harder to Push, When I Have to Push Hard-Physical Exertion and Fatigue Changes Reasoning and Decision-Making on Hypothetical Moral Dilemmas in Males.</name><description>Despite the prevalence of physical exertion and fatigue during military, firefighting and disaster medicine operations, sports or even daily life, their acute effects on moral reasoning and moral decision-making have never been systematically investigated. To test the effects of physical exertion on moral reasoning and moral decision-making, we administered a moral dilemma task to 32 male participants during a moderate or high intensity cycling intervention. Participants in the high intensity cycling group tended to show more non-utilitarian reasoning and more non-utilitarian decision-making on impersonal but not on personal dilemmas than participants in the moderate intensity cycling group. Exercise-induced exertion and fatigue, thus, shifted moral reasoning and moral decision-making in a non-utilitarian rather than utilitarian direction, presumably due to an exercise-induced limitation of prefrontally mediated executive resources that are more relevant for utilitarian than non-utilitarian reasoning and decision-making.</description><dates><release>2018-01-01T00:00:00Z</release><publication>2018</publication><modification>2024-10-17T20:37:33.137Z</modification><creation>2019-03-27T00:11:40Z</creation></dates><accession>S-EPMC6276357</accession><cross_references><pubmed>30534061</pubmed><doi>10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00268</doi></cross_references></HashMap>