Learning procedures such as mere exposure, evaluative conditioning, and approach/avoidance training have been used to establish evaluative responses as measured by the Implicit Association Test (IAT). In this paper, we used the Quad model to disentangle the processes driving IAT responses instantiated by these evaluative learning procedures. Half of the participants experienced one of these three procedures whereas the other half only received instructions about how the procedure would work. Across three experiments (total n = 4231), we examined the extent to which instruction-based versus experience-based evaluative learning impacted Quad estimates of the Activation of evaluative information in IAT responses. Relative to a control conditio...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
In the field of implicit social cognition, indirect evaluative responses represent an opportunity to...
Vandenbosch and De Houwer (this issue) reported a series of failures to induce an implicit evaluatio...
Learning procedures such as mere exposure, evaluative conditioning, and approach/avoidance training ...
The mere exposure effect refers to the well-established finding that people evaluate a stimulus more...
Woud, Becker, and Rinck (2008) asked participants to repeatedly push pictures of certain faces away ...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is a popular tool for measuring attitudes. We suggest that perfo...
Given that human causal judgments may be based on propositional reasoning processes rather than refl...
An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an at...
Implicit covariation learning, the development of simple associations without awareness, has been de...
An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an at...
Dans le champ de la cognition sociale implicite, les réponses évaluatives indirectes représentent un...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is the most widely used measure to assess automatic evaluations....
The current paper introduces a novel feature of Implicit Association Tests (IATs) by demonstrating t...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) was designed to measure automatically activated attitudinal asso...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
In the field of implicit social cognition, indirect evaluative responses represent an opportunity to...
Vandenbosch and De Houwer (this issue) reported a series of failures to induce an implicit evaluatio...
Learning procedures such as mere exposure, evaluative conditioning, and approach/avoidance training ...
The mere exposure effect refers to the well-established finding that people evaluate a stimulus more...
Woud, Becker, and Rinck (2008) asked participants to repeatedly push pictures of certain faces away ...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is a popular tool for measuring attitudes. We suggest that perfo...
Given that human causal judgments may be based on propositional reasoning processes rather than refl...
An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an at...
Implicit covariation learning, the development of simple associations without awareness, has been de...
An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an at...
Dans le champ de la cognition sociale implicite, les réponses évaluatives indirectes représentent un...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is the most widely used measure to assess automatic evaluations....
The current paper introduces a novel feature of Implicit Association Tests (IATs) by demonstrating t...
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) was designed to measure automatically activated attitudinal asso...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
In the field of implicit social cognition, indirect evaluative responses represent an opportunity to...
Vandenbosch and De Houwer (this issue) reported a series of failures to induce an implicit evaluatio...