ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2026, Vol. 58 ›› Issue (8): 1600-1619.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2026.1600 cstr: 32110.14.2026.1600

• 研究报告 • 上一篇    下一篇

道德雾霾效应:感知环境威胁提高个体对不道德行为的接受度

陈思静1, 杨莎莎2, 许懿杰1, 牟红蕾1, 孙庆洲3   

  1. 1浙江科技大学管理学院, 杭州 310023;
    2华东师范大学心理与认知科学学院, 上海 200062;
    3浙江工业大学管理学院, 杭州 310023
  • 收稿日期:2025-07-04 发布日期:2026-06-16 出版日期:2026-08-25
  • 通讯作者: 孙庆洲, E-mail:sunqingzhou2008@163.com
  • 作者简介:陈思静和杨莎莎同为第一作者。
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上项目(No.72271220)资助

Moral smog effect: Perceived environmental threat increases individuals’ acceptance of unethical behavior

CHEN Sijing1, YANG Shasha2, XU Yijie1, MU Honglei1, SUN Qingzhou3   

  1. 1School of Management, Zhejiang University of Science and Technology, Hangzhou 310023, China;
    2School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200062, China;
    3School of Management, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310023, China
  • Received:2025-07-04 Online:2026-06-16 Published:2026-08-25

摘要: 感知环境威胁不仅滋生不道德行为, 也提升了人们对不道德行为的接受度。基于2021年中国综合社会调查和第5轮世界价值观调查数据, 研究1a (N = 1965)与1b (N = 1053)一致发现, 个体对环境威胁的感知正向预测其对不道德行为的接受度; 而基于与研究1a相同数据库的补充研究S1则初步发现, 心理压力可以部分解释上述关系。研究2 (N = 249)通过实验范式验证了主效应的因果性, 并进一步检验压力的中介作用。研究3 (N = 497)通过同时操纵感知环境威胁与压力水平, 为压力的中介机制提供了更直接的证据。研究4 (N = 482)及补充分析(N = 487)发现, 无论不道德行为由自身还是他人实施, 感知环境威胁均提升了对其的接受度, 暗示该效应可能不受道德主体的影响。本研究揭示了环境威胁如何通过提升个体压力, 间接降低人们对不道德行为的敏感性, 进而潜在地侵蚀社会整体的道德氛围。研究结果为环境政策传播与社会道德建设提供了新的心理学视角, 强调在环境风险不断加剧的背景下, 应关注公众在情绪调节与道德认知层面的深层反应, 从而实现更具人本关怀的社会治理与规范引导。

关键词: 感知环境威胁, 不道德行为, 压力, 道德虚伪

Abstract: Environmental threats have emerged as one of the most pressing global challenges of our time. While extensive research has examined the economic, social, and health-related consequences of environmental degradation, its impact on moral psychology remains underexplored. Existing studies have primarily focused on whether environmental threats elicit unethical behaviors, yet little is known about how such threats may influence individuals’ moral evaluations—specifically, their tolerance toward unethical behaviors. This paper proposes that perceived environmental threats not only influence individuals’ engagement in unethical behavior, but also shift moral standards themselves. We refer to this pattern as the “moral smog effect”.
Across five primary studies and two supplementary studies (Ntotal = 4, 733), we employed a multi-method approach that combined secondary data analyses with experimental methods to examine the relationship between perceived environmental threat and moral judgment. Studies 1a and 1b analyzed two large-scale datasets—the 2021 Chinese General Social Survey and the fifth wave of the World Values Survey (Chinese subsample)—using correlational methods to examine the association between perceived environmental threat and the acceptability of unethical behaviors. Supplementary Study S1 drew on the same sample as Study 1a and incorporated psychological stress as an additional variable, providing initial evidence that stress partially accounts for this association. Study 2 adopted a single-factor between-participants experimental design, manipulating environmental threat via scenario priming (high vs. low threat), followed by participants’ moral evaluations of a series of unethical behaviors. Study 3 utilized a 2 (perceived environmental threat: high vs. low) × 2 (psychological stress: induced vs. neutral) between-participants design, enabling a test of the mediating role of stress through a “manipulation-of-mediation-as-a-moderator” design. Study 4 and the supplementary study employed two 2 (perceived environmental threat: high vs. low) × 2 (moral agent: self vs. other) between-participants designs to test whether the moral agent (self vs. other) moderated the main effect of environmental threat on moral judgment.
The findings across these studies converge on the conclusion that perceived environmental threats consistently increased individuals’ acceptance of unethical behaviors. This relationship was robust across diverse measurement tools, data sources, and research designs. Experimental results further demonstrated that the experience of environmental threat elevates stress levels, which in turn reduces individuals’ cognitive capacity to uphold abstract moral norms, leading to greater moral leniency. Importantly, Study 4 and its supplementary analysis found no evidence of moral hypocrisy under threat: participants became equally tolerant of unethical behavior regardless of whether it was enacted by themselves or by others, and this pattern remained robust after controlling for social desirability. This finding suggests that environmental stress may impair individuals’ ability to differentiate between moral agents, potentially due to reduced cognitive resources under heightened stress.
This research advances theoretical understanding in both environmental psychology and moral cognition by demonstrating that environmental threats can systematically reshape individuals’ moral standards, rather than merely influencing their behavioral tendencies. The concept of the “moral smog effect” contributes to a broader recognition that the psychological consequences of environmental degradation extend beyond emotions and health to include value systems and social norms. Practically, these findings carry significant implications for public policy and moral education. In an era of escalating environmental risk, fostering psychologically safe and low-stress environments may help safeguard not only public well-being but also the moral fabric of society. Recognizing the moral costs of environmental threat thus adds a critical dimension to the discourse on sustainable development and ethical governance.

Key words: perceived environmental threat, unethical behavior, stress, moral hypocrisy