Previous research has demonstrated that implicit evaluations can be reversed with exposure to a single impression-inconsistent behavior. But what exactly is changing when perceivers encounter diagnostic revelations about someone? One possibility is that rapid changes are occurring in the extent to which perceivers view the person positively or negatively. Another possibility is that they override the expression of initial evaluations through control-oriented processes. We conducted three studies (one preregistered) that used multinomial process trees to distinguish between these possibilities. We find consistent support across two different implicit measures that diagnostic behaviors result in rapid changes in evaluative processes. We obtai...
Traditional models of attitude change have assumed that when people appear to have changed their att...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Evaluative processes are often considered to be a cornerstone of social perception. The present stud...
We sometimes evaluate our environment (e.g., persons, objects, situations) in an automatic fashion. ...
It is often assumed that, once established, spontaneous or implicit evaluations are resistant to imm...
Contains fulltext : 56251.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Implicit or au...
Understanding patterns of attitude change change, but explicit measures do notq, On rese nal ly s en...
Evaluative conditioning (EC) refers to a change in one's attitude toward an object based on its cont...
Conditions under which implicit and explicit impressions of an individual may change in response to ...
Researchers have had a long-standing interest in the relative contributions of implicit and explicit...
"Researchers often employ implicit measures as dependent variables to investigate processes of attit...
Although change blindness could suggest that observers represent far less of their visual world than...
Evidence suggests that while explicit evaluations of others are easily formed and equally easily cha...
Implicit or automatic processes are important in understanding the etiology and maintenance of psych...
© 2013 Dr. Juan Jose MuzioRecent research has demonstrated that people can have dual-attitudes which...
Traditional models of attitude change have assumed that when people appear to have changed their att...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Evaluative processes are often considered to be a cornerstone of social perception. The present stud...
We sometimes evaluate our environment (e.g., persons, objects, situations) in an automatic fashion. ...
It is often assumed that, once established, spontaneous or implicit evaluations are resistant to imm...
Contains fulltext : 56251.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Implicit or au...
Understanding patterns of attitude change change, but explicit measures do notq, On rese nal ly s en...
Evaluative conditioning (EC) refers to a change in one's attitude toward an object based on its cont...
Conditions under which implicit and explicit impressions of an individual may change in response to ...
Researchers have had a long-standing interest in the relative contributions of implicit and explicit...
"Researchers often employ implicit measures as dependent variables to investigate processes of attit...
Although change blindness could suggest that observers represent far less of their visual world than...
Evidence suggests that while explicit evaluations of others are easily formed and equally easily cha...
Implicit or automatic processes are important in understanding the etiology and maintenance of psych...
© 2013 Dr. Juan Jose MuzioRecent research has demonstrated that people can have dual-attitudes which...
Traditional models of attitude change have assumed that when people appear to have changed their att...
In this article, we describe four theoretical and methodological problems that have impeded implicit...
Evaluative processes are often considered to be a cornerstone of social perception. The present stud...