Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Confronting moral choices in contexts of limited resources requires individuals to integrate reasoning, emotions, and interpersonal dynamics. However, most research on moral decision-making relies on laboratory paradigms that limit ecological validity, restricting natural emotional expression. To address this limitation, this study examined how dyads converge on moral choices through real-time negotiation, focusing on the interplay between cognitive and emotional processing. METHODS: Fifteen same-sex adult dyads participated in a moral evaluation task, deciding which of two patients to prioritise for treatment. During the negotiation, conducted in direct social interaction rather than in isolated lab-based evaluation, prefrontal cortex activity was simultaneously recorded in both participants using fNIRS hyperscanning, a paradigm suited to naturalistic interpersonal contexts. RESULTS: Results revealed a significant increase in the dissimilarity in the deoxygenated haemoglobin (HHb) activity between channel 6 (F6-F4, right hemisphere) and channel 3 (F5-F3, left hemisphere);no significant effects were observed for oxygenated haemoglobin (O(2)Hb); This, may suggest a differentiated engagement of analytical reasoning (left hemisphere) and emotional-social processing (right hemisphere). The latter - expressed through subtle embodied cues-plays a central regulatory role in influencing each other's judgment. DISCUSSION: These findings support the view that moral negotiation is a dynamic, affectively grounded process, shaped not only by cognitive deliberation but also by emotional information expressed through bodily and facial cues. By integrating hyperscanning with a naturalistic interpersonal setting, this study can contribute to bridging the gap between lab-based and real-world moral decision-making, offering insights into the neural underpinnings of shared evaluation.