The authors describe the use of the affective Simon paradigm as a measure of individual differences in implicit social cognition about death. Participants made verbal responses of "good" or "bad" to death and neutral stimuli based on whether the word was a person or a thing. Participants also completed the Revised Death Attitude Profile, a Stroop task, and a version of the Implicit Association Test using death-related words. Although the affective Simon paradigm has some theoretical advantages over the IAT and Stroop procedures, we found no evidence for its validity in the present study
The implicit association test (IAT) is a method used to examine associations individuals make betwee...
Traditionally psychologists used explicit self-reports to better understand individuals’ attitudes b...
The experimental manipulation of mortality salience (MS) represents one of the most widely used meth...
The authors describe the use of the affective Simon paradigm as a measure of individual differences ...
What an individual thinks about their own life and death appears to provide useful information on th...
Terror management theory (TMT; Greenberg, Pyszczynski, & Solomon, 1986) has been extensively tested ...
Over the last fifty years, psychological science can be credited with persistent efforts to prevent...
Background: Individuals with suicidal ideation share cognitive biases linking multiple thoughts to d...
Suicide risk assessment is a challenge in clinical practice. Implicit measures may present with adva...
In this talk we will present an overview of experimental paradigms originating in social psychology ...
Suicide is difficult to predict and prevent because people who consider killing themselves often are...
Three experiments investigated whether implicit self-esteem was influenced by various perceptual sti...
The aim of the study was to investigate responses to dementia‐relevant words in healthy older people...
The construct and criterion validity of the Depression Implicit Association Test (Depression IAT) a...
ABSTRACT—Reminders of death tend to produce strong cognitive and behavioral responses, but little or...
The implicit association test (IAT) is a method used to examine associations individuals make betwee...
Traditionally psychologists used explicit self-reports to better understand individuals’ attitudes b...
The experimental manipulation of mortality salience (MS) represents one of the most widely used meth...
The authors describe the use of the affective Simon paradigm as a measure of individual differences ...
What an individual thinks about their own life and death appears to provide useful information on th...
Terror management theory (TMT; Greenberg, Pyszczynski, & Solomon, 1986) has been extensively tested ...
Over the last fifty years, psychological science can be credited with persistent efforts to prevent...
Background: Individuals with suicidal ideation share cognitive biases linking multiple thoughts to d...
Suicide risk assessment is a challenge in clinical practice. Implicit measures may present with adva...
In this talk we will present an overview of experimental paradigms originating in social psychology ...
Suicide is difficult to predict and prevent because people who consider killing themselves often are...
Three experiments investigated whether implicit self-esteem was influenced by various perceptual sti...
The aim of the study was to investigate responses to dementia‐relevant words in healthy older people...
The construct and criterion validity of the Depression Implicit Association Test (Depression IAT) a...
ABSTRACT—Reminders of death tend to produce strong cognitive and behavioral responses, but little or...
The implicit association test (IAT) is a method used to examine associations individuals make betwee...
Traditionally psychologists used explicit self-reports to better understand individuals’ attitudes b...
The experimental manipulation of mortality salience (MS) represents one of the most widely used meth...