نتایج جستجو برای: 1989 and implicit association test iat

تعداد نتایج: 16956018  

Journal: :Revue internationale de psychologie sociale 2023

Although explicit measures of doping attitude are widely used, they susceptible to bias due social desirability. The current computerized implicit attitudes time-consuming and based on expensive software solutions. Recently, paper-and-pencil (p&p) Implicit Association Tests (IAT) have been developed, making it possible test several participants simultaneously, anywhere, with no need equipme...

Journal: :The Proceedings of the Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association 2018

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 2011
Michael D Buhrmester Hart Blanton William B Swann

Gaining insight into the nature and consequences of people's global self-evaluations (i.e., their self-esteem) has been fraught with difficulty. Nearly 2 decades ago, researchers suggested that such difficulties might be addressed by the development of a new class of measures designed to uncover implicit self-esteem. In this article, we evaluate the construct validity of the 2 most common measu...

Journal: :Frontiers in Psychology 2021

The aim of the present research was to test whether involvement in a 14-days training program performing arts could reduce implicit biases. We asked healthy participants complete an Implicit Association Test (IAT) assess biased attitudes physical illness two separate sessions, before and after program. Two control groups matched by age, gender educational level completed IAT separated same numb...

2002
Cassandra L. Govan Kipling D. Williams Anthony Greenwald Jan De Houwer

The Implicit Association Test (IAT; Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998) is a computer-based categorization task that measures concept association strengths. Greenwald et al. (1998) demonstrated that participants completed the categorizations more quickly when pleasant and flower shared a response key than when pleasant and insect shared a response key, and when pleasant and White shared a resp...

Journal: :JAMA 2011
Adil H Haider Janel Sexton N Sriram Lisa A Cooper David T Efron Sandra Swoboda Cassandra V Villegas Elliott R Haut Morgan Bonds Peter J Pronovost Pamela A Lipsett Julie A Freischlag Edward E Cornwell

CONTEXT Studies involving physicians suggest that unconscious bias may be related to clinical decision making and may predict poor patient-physician interaction. The presence of unconscious race and social class bias and its association with clinical assessments or decision making among medical students is unknown. OBJECTIVE To estimate unconscious race and social class bias among first-year ...

2017
Dermot Lynott Michael Walsh Tony McEnery Louise Connell Liam Cross

The implicit association test (IAT) measures bias towards often controversial topics (race/religion), while newspapers typically take strong positive/negative stances on such issues. In a pre-registered study, we developed and administered an immigration IAT to readers of the Daily Mail (typically anti-immigration) and Guardian (typically pro-immigration) newspapers. IAT Materials were construc...

Journal: :Experimental psychology 2009
N Sriram Anthony G Greenwald

The Brief Implicit Association Test (BIAT) consists of two blocks of trials with the same four categories and stimulus-response mappings as the standard IAT, but with 1/3 the number of trials. Unlike the standard IAT, the BIAT focuses the subject on just two of each block's four categories. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated that attitude BIATs had satisfactory validity when good (but not bad) wa...

2013
Jorge Bravo

The Implicit Association Test (IAT) has emerged as the most common procedure to measure implicit attitudes, and in particular stereotypes towards members of an out-group. An important reason behind the popularity of the IAT is that it displays relatively high reliability when compared to other measures of implicit attitudes. Still, despite its relative merits when compared to available alternat...

2009
N. Sriram Anthony G. Greenwald Justin Storbeck

The Brief Implicit Association Test (BIAT) consists of 2 blocks of trials with the same 4 categories and stimulus-response mappings as the standard IAT, but with 1/3 the number of trials. Unlike the standard IAT, the BIAT focuses the subject on just 2 of each block’s 4 categories. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated that attitude BIATs had satisfactory validity when good (but not bad) was a focal ...

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