Understanding patterns of attitude change change, but explicit measures do notq, On rese nal ly s ent acc tal osit he c ssoc that ‘ come More measu direct nk & S-report n attit are ba older, highly stable implicit attitudes tapped by indirect measures. The main goal of the present research was to test a process-ac-count of experimental effects on implicit but not explicit measures. In line with contemporary dual-process models (e.g., Fazio & Olson, 2003; Gawronski & Bodenhausen, 2006), we argue that implicit measures provide a proxy for automatic associations in memory, which may or may not influence verbal judgments reflected in self-report measures (for a review, see Hofmann, Gschwendner
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Comparing measures of attitudes 2 During the past decade, many new measures of attitudes have been p...
The moderating role of individual difference variables (Self-Reported Habit Index [SRHI], Need for C...
It is a common assumption that responses on implicit measures are proxies for automatically activate...
Traditional models of attitude change have assumed that when people appear to have changed their att...
A common assumption about implicit measures is that they reflect early experiences, whereas explicit...
Traditionally psychologists used explicit self-reports to better understand individuals’ attitudes b...
A common assumption about implicit measures is that they reflect early experiences, whereas explicit...
"Researchers often employ implicit measures as dependent variables to investigate processes of attit...
Implicit measures are often preferred to overt questioning in many areas of psychology. Their covert...
ABSTRACT—Response latency measures have yielded an explo-sion of interest in implicit attitudes. Les...
The Implicit Association Test and its variants have become pervasive measures of attitudes in a vari...
There is a long history of research in social psychologyon the relationship between measures of atti...
The moderating role of individual difference variables (Self-Reported Habit Index [SRHI], Need for C...
Research increasingly supports the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) as a measure capa...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Comparing measures of attitudes 2 During the past decade, many new measures of attitudes have been p...
The moderating role of individual difference variables (Self-Reported Habit Index [SRHI], Need for C...
It is a common assumption that responses on implicit measures are proxies for automatically activate...
Traditional models of attitude change have assumed that when people appear to have changed their att...
A common assumption about implicit measures is that they reflect early experiences, whereas explicit...
Traditionally psychologists used explicit self-reports to better understand individuals’ attitudes b...
A common assumption about implicit measures is that they reflect early experiences, whereas explicit...
"Researchers often employ implicit measures as dependent variables to investigate processes of attit...
Implicit measures are often preferred to overt questioning in many areas of psychology. Their covert...
ABSTRACT—Response latency measures have yielded an explo-sion of interest in implicit attitudes. Les...
The Implicit Association Test and its variants have become pervasive measures of attitudes in a vari...
There is a long history of research in social psychologyon the relationship between measures of atti...
The moderating role of individual difference variables (Self-Reported Habit Index [SRHI], Need for C...
Research increasingly supports the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) as a measure capa...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Comparing measures of attitudes 2 During the past decade, many new measures of attitudes have been p...
The moderating role of individual difference variables (Self-Reported Habit Index [SRHI], Need for C...