Publications

Bernhard, R. M., LeBaron, H. Cushman, F., & (submitted). The paradox of aversive punishment. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R. M., Cushman, F. A., & Cameron, A., Phillips, J. S., (in press). The neural instantiation of spontaneous counterfactual thought. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R. M., Frankland, S. M., Plunkett, D., Sievers, B., & Greene, J. D. (2023). Evidence for Spinozan “Unbelieving” in the Right Inferior Prefrontal Cortex. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R. M., LeBaron, H., & Phillips, J. (2022). It’s not what you did, it’s what you could have done. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R. M., & Cushman, F. (2022). Extortion, intuition, and the dark side of reciprocity. Click here to read.

*Huang, K., *Bernhard, R.M., Barak-Corren, N., Bazerman, M., & Greene, J.D. (2021). Veil-of ignorance Reasoning Favors Allocating Resources to Younger Patients During the COVID-19 Crisis.
*Indicates shared first authorship Click here to read.

Bazerman, M. H., Bernhard, R., Greene, J., Huang, K., & Barak-Corren, N. (2020). How should we allocate scarce medical resources. Harvard Business Review. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R.M., Martin, J.M., & Warneken, F. (2020). Why do children punish? Fair outcomes matter more than intent in children’s second- and third-party punishment. Click here to read.

Bernhard, R.M., Chaponis, J., Siburian R., Gallagher, P., Ransohoff, K., Wikler, D., Perlis, R.H., & Greene, J.D. (2016). Variation in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) is associated with differences in moral judgment. Click here to read.