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Featured researches published by Katinka Quintelier.


Human Nature | 2013

Individual Differences in Reproductive Strategy are Related to Views about Recreational Drug Use in Belgium, The Netherlands, and Japan

Katinka Quintelier; Keiko Ishii; Jason Weeden; Robert Kurzban; Johan Braeckman

Individual differences in moral views are often explained as the downstream effect of ideological commitments, such as political orientation and religiosity. Recent studies in the U.S. suggest that moral views about recreational drug use are also influenced by attitudes toward sex and that this relationship cannot be explained by ideological commitments. In this study, we investigate student samples from Belgium, The Netherlands, and Japan. We find that, in all samples, sexual attitudes are strongly related to views about recreational drug use, even after controlling for various ideological variables. We discuss our results in light of reproductive strategies as determinants of moral views.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Detecting affiliation in colaughter across 24 societies

Gregory A. Bryant; Daniel M. T. Fessler; Riccardo Fusaroli; Edward K. Clint; Lene Aarøe; Coren L. Apicella; Michael Bang Petersen; Shaneikiah T. Bickham; Alexander H. Bolyanatz; Brenda Lía Chávez; Delphine De Smet; Cinthya Díaz; Jana Fančovičová; Michal Fux; Paulina Giraldo-Perez; Anning Hu; Shanmukh V. Kamble; Tatsuya Kameda; Norman P. Li; Francesca R. Luberti; Pavol Prokop; Katinka Quintelier; Brooke A. Scelza; HyunJung Shin; Montserrat Soler; Stefan Stieger; Wataru Toyokawa; Ellis A. van den Hende; Hugo Viciana-Asensio; Saliha Elif Yildizhan

Significance Human cooperation requires reliable communication about social intentions and alliances. Although laughter is a phylogenetically conserved vocalization linked to affiliative behavior in nonhuman primates, its functions in modern humans are not well understood. We show that judges all around the world, hearing only brief instances of colaughter produced by pairs of American English speakers in real conversations, are able to reliably identify friends and strangers. Participants’ judgments of friendship status were linked to acoustic features of laughs known to be associated with spontaneous production and high arousal. These findings strongly suggest that colaughter is universally perceivable as a reliable indicator of relationship quality, and contribute to our understanding of how nonverbal communicative behavior might have facilitated the evolution of cooperation. Laughter is a nonverbal vocal expression that often communicates positive affect and cooperative intent in humans. Temporally coincident laughter occurring within groups is a potentially rich cue of affiliation to overhearers. We examined listeners’ judgments of affiliation based on brief, decontextualized instances of colaughter between either established friends or recently acquainted strangers. In a sample of 966 participants from 24 societies, people reliably distinguished friends from strangers with an accuracy of 53–67%. Acoustic analyses of the individual laughter segments revealed that, across cultures, listeners’ judgments were consistently predicted by voicing dynamics, suggesting perceptual sensitivity to emotionally triggered spontaneous production. Colaughter affords rapid and accurate appraisals of affiliation that transcend cultural and linguistic boundaries, and may constitute a universal means of signaling cooperative relationships.


Acta Biotheoretica | 2011

Normative Ethics Does Not Need a Foundation: It Needs More Science

Katinka Quintelier; Linda Van Speybroeck; Johan Braeckman

The impact of science on ethics forms since long the subject of intense debate. Although there is a growing consensus that science can describe morality and explain its evolutionary origins, there is less consensus about the ability of science to provide input to the normative domain of ethics. Whereas defenders of a scientific normative ethics appeal to naturalism, its critics either see the naturalistic fallacy committed or argue that the relevance of science to normative ethics remains undemonstrated. In this paper, we argue that current scientific normative ethicists commit no fallacy, that criticisms of scientific ethics contradict each other, and that scientific insights are relevant to normative inquiries by informing ethics about the options open to the ethical debate. Moreover, when conceiving normative ethics as being a nonfoundational ethics, science can be used to evaluate every possible norm. This stands in contrast to foundational ethics in which some norms remain beyond scientific inquiry. Finally, we state that a difference in conception of normative ethics underlies the disagreement between proponents and opponents of a scientific ethics. Our argument is based on and preceded by a reconsideration of the notions naturalistic fallacy and foundational ethics. This argument differs from previous work in scientific ethics: whereas before the philosophical project of naturalizing the normative has been stressed, here we focus on concrete consequences of biological findings for normative decisions or on the day-to-day normative relevance of these scientific insights.


Thinking & Reasoning | 2012

The case of the drunken sailor: On the generalisable wrongness of harmful transgressions

Katinka Quintelier; Daniel M. T. Fessler; Delphine De Smet

There is a widespread conviction that people distinguish two kinds of acts: on the one hand, acts that are generalisably wrong because they go against universal principles of harm, justice, or rights; on the other hand, acts that are variably right or wrong depending on the social context. In this paper we criticise existing methods that measure generalisability. We report new findings indicating that a modification of generalisability measures is in order. We discuss our findings in light of recent criticisms of moral/conventional research.


Philosophical Explorations | 2015

Confounds in moral/conventional studies

Katinka Quintelier; Daniel M. T. Fessler

In ‘The nature of moral judgments and the extent of the moral domain’, Fraser (2012) criticises findings by Kelly et al. (2007) that speak against the moral/conventional (M/C) distinction, arguing that the experiment was confounded. First, we note that the results of that experiment held up when confounds were removed (Quintelier, Fessler, and De Smet 2012). Second, and more importantly, we argue that attempts to prove the existence of a M/C distinction are systematically confounded. In contrast to Fraser, we refer to data that support our view. We highlight the implications for the moral/conventional theory.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

How (not) to argue about is/ought inferences in the cognitive sciences

Katinka Quintelier; Lieuwe Zijlstra

When scholars problematize is/ought inferences (IOI’s), they sometimes refer to Hume’s or Moore’s fallacy (e.g., Schneider, 2000; Schroyens, 2009; Elqayam and Evans, 2011). Although inferring “ought” from “is” can be problematic, we argue that, in the context of contemporary IOI’s in the cognitive sciences, invoking Hume or Moore might be misguided. This is because Hume’s and Moore’s arguments concern the validity and soundness of deductive inferences while in our view contemporary IOI’s in the cognitive sciences are better interpreted as defeasible inferences. Inorder to avoidmisinterpretations, we first clarify key concepts in the debate in section Key Concepts. In section Mind the Gap, we revisit Hume’s and Moore’s arguments against inferring “ought” from “is,” and in section AD ebate Shackled, we discuss contemporary IOI’s in the cognitive sciences.


Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 2011

Naturalizing the normative and the bridges between is and ought

Katinka Quintelier; Daniel M. T. Fessler

Elqayam & Evans (E&E) suggest descriptivism as a way to avoid fallacies and research biases. We argue, first, that descriptive and prescriptive theories might be better off with a closer interaction between “is” and “ought.” Moreover, while we acknowledge the problematic nature of the discussed fallacies and biases, important aspects of research would be lost through a broad application of descriptivism.


Biology and Philosophy | 2012

Varying versions of moral relativism: the philosophy and psychology of normative relativism

Katinka Quintelier; Daniel M. T. Fessler


Klesis Revue philosophique | 2013

The moral universalism- relativism debate

Katinka Quintelier; D. De Smet; Daniel M. T. Fessler


Advances in experimental moral psychology | 2014

Agent versus appraiser moral relativism: an exploratory study

Katinka Quintelier; Delphine De Smet; Daniel M. T. Fessler

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Norman P. Li

Singapore Management University

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Ellis A. van den Hende

Delft University of Technology

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Coren L. Apicella

University of Pennsylvania

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Curtis Yee

University of California

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