نتایج جستجو برای: 1989 and implicit association test iat

تعداد نتایج: 16956018  

2012
Chad E. Forbes Katherine A. Cameron Jordan Grafman Aron Barbey Jeffrey Solomon Walter Ritter Daniel S. Ruchkin

The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is a popular behavioral measure that assesses the associative strength between outgroup members and stereotypical and counterstereotypical traits. Less is known, however, about the degree to which the IAT reflects automatic processing. Two studies examined automatic processing contributions to a gender-IAT using a data driven, social neuroscience approach. Pe...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 2013
Franziska Meissner Klaus Rothermund

We introduce the ReAL model for the Implicit Association Test (IAT), a multinomial processing tree model that allows one to mathematically separate the contributions of attitude-based evaluative associations and recoding processes in a specific IAT. The ReAL model explains the observed pattern of erroneous and correct responses in the IAT via 3 underlying processes: recoding of target and attri...

Journal: :Journal of anxiety disorders 2007
Mark J Boschen Innes Parker David L Neumann

Previous research shows that an 'angry face' conditioned stimulus will elicit conditioned skin conductance responses (SCR) after a small number of trials pairing it with a mild electric shock. Such conditioning occurs even with masked presentations of the facial stimulus. Furthermore, the Implicit Association Test (IAT) has been demonstrated to be sensitive to the presence of information proces...

2014
Dermot Lynott Kerry O'Brien Louise Connell Nick Shryane Himanshu Kansal Michael Walsh

People often have attitudes and biases of which they may not be consciously aware. The implicit association test (IAT) is one of the key tools used to investigate such attitudes, especially when it comes to controversial topics (e.g., racial prejudice). In an IAT, participants categorise stimuli (words/pictures) that are paired with either positive or negative attributes. The differences in res...

Journal: :Psychological science 2006
Andrew Scott Baron Mahzarin R Banaji

To understand the origin and development of implicit attitudes, we measured race attitudes in White American 6-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and adults by first developing a child-oriented version of the Implicit Association Test (Child IAT). Remarkably, implicit pro-White/anti-Black bias was evident even in the youngest group, with self-reported attitudes revealing bias in the same direction. In 10...

2017
Alan Schwartz Abdelhamid Mazouni

INTRODUCTION Medical educators have been concerned that medical students may decline in empathy for patients during the course of their training, based on studies measuring clinical empathy using psychometrically strong self-report measures. Clinical empathy is a complex construct, incorporating attitudes toward patients but also other components, such as professional detachment. Triangulation ...

1999
John T. Jost Laurie A. Rudman Irene V. Blair Dana R. Carney Nilanjana Dasgupta Jack Glaser Curtis D. Hardin

In this article, we respond at length to recent critiques of research on implicit bias, especially studies using the Implicit Association Test (IAT). Tetlock and Mitchell (2009) claim that ‘‘there is no evidence that the IAT reliably predicts class-wide discrimination on tangible outcomes in any setting,’’ accuse their colleagues of violating ‘‘the injunction to separate factual from value judg...

2012
Janice A. Sabin Maddalena Marini Brian A. Nosek

Overweight patients report weight discrimination in health care settings and subsequent avoidance of routine preventive health care. The purpose of this study was to examine implicit and explicit attitudes about weight among a large group of medical doctors (MDs) to determine the pervasiveness of negative attitudes about weight among MDs. Test-takers voluntarily accessed a public Web site, know...

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