Do Emotions Influence Moral Judgment in Large Language Models?

Mohammad Saim, Tianyu Jiang


Abstract
Large language models have been extensively studied for emotion recognition and moral reasoning as distinct capabilities, yet the extent to which emotions influence moral judgment remains underexplored. In this work, we develop an emotion-induction pipeline that infuses emotion into moral situations and evaluate shifts in moral acceptability across multiple datasets and LLMs.We observe a directional pattern: positive emotions increase moral acceptability and negative emotions decrease it, with effects strong enough to reverse binary moral judgments in up to 20% of cases, and with susceptibility scaling inversely with model capability.Our analysis further reveals that specific emotions can sometimes behave contrary to what their valence would predict (e.g., remorse paradoxically increases acceptability). A complementary human annotation study shows humans do not exhibit these systematic shifts, indicating an alignment gap in current LLMs.
Anthology ID:
2026.findings-acl.1346
Volume:
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026
Month:
July
Year:
2026
Address:
San Diego, California, United States
Editors:
Maria Liakata, Viviane P. Moreira, Jiajun Zhang, David Jurgens
Venue:
Findings
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Publisher:
Association for Computational Linguistics
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Pages:
26996–27013
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URL:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-acl/2026.findings-acl.1346/
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Cite (ACL):
Mohammad Saim and Tianyu Jiang. 2026. Do Emotions Influence Moral Judgment in Large Language Models?. In Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026, pages 26996–27013, San Diego, California, United States. Association for Computational Linguistics.
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Do Emotions Influence Moral Judgment in Large Language Models? (Saim & Jiang, Findings 2026)
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