In attitude research, behaviours are often used as proxies for attitudes and attitudinal processes. This practice is problematic because it conflates the behaviours that need to be explained (explanandum) with the mental constructs that are used to explain these behaviours (explanans). In the current chapter we propose a meta-theoretical framework that resolves this problem by distinguishing between two levels of analysis. According to the proposed framework, attitude research can be conceptualised as the scientific study of evaluation. Evaluation is defined not in terms of mental constructs but in terms of elements in the environment, more specifically, as the effect of stimuli on evaluative responses. From this perspective, attitude resea...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
Zajonc (1980) proposed that affect and cognition are governed by separate, albeit frequently interac...
Research surrounding the construct of "implicit attitudes" and the various methodologies for measuri...
In attitude research, behaviours are often used as proxies for attitudes and attitudinal processes. ...
This piece will examine the concept of attitudes from three alternative perspectives, exploring whic...
Cognitively oriented psychologists often define behavioral effects in terms of mental constructs (e....
The concept of attitude in psychological and social psychological literature has a variety of interp...
A recent debate in the Journal of Consumer Psychology illustrates many of the unresolved is-sues con...
This article considers the application of the Attitude framework (Martin & White 2005) to study the ...
In this article, we address how attitudes are acquired. We present evaluative conditioning (EC) as a...
Attitudes-cognitive representations of our evaluation of ourselves, other people, things, actions, e...
This chapter reviews social neuroscience research that links social psychological attitudes and eval...
This paper provides a descriptive decision model that is based on a single behavioral pattern: human...
Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective knowle...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Cognition an Emo...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
Zajonc (1980) proposed that affect and cognition are governed by separate, albeit frequently interac...
Research surrounding the construct of "implicit attitudes" and the various methodologies for measuri...
In attitude research, behaviours are often used as proxies for attitudes and attitudinal processes. ...
This piece will examine the concept of attitudes from three alternative perspectives, exploring whic...
Cognitively oriented psychologists often define behavioral effects in terms of mental constructs (e....
The concept of attitude in psychological and social psychological literature has a variety of interp...
A recent debate in the Journal of Consumer Psychology illustrates many of the unresolved is-sues con...
This article considers the application of the Attitude framework (Martin & White 2005) to study the ...
In this article, we address how attitudes are acquired. We present evaluative conditioning (EC) as a...
Attitudes-cognitive representations of our evaluation of ourselves, other people, things, actions, e...
This chapter reviews social neuroscience research that links social psychological attitudes and eval...
This paper provides a descriptive decision model that is based on a single behavioral pattern: human...
Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective knowle...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Cognition an Emo...
<p>Attitudes represent object evaluations, comprising complex underlying cognitive and affective kno...
Zajonc (1980) proposed that affect and cognition are governed by separate, albeit frequently interac...
Research surrounding the construct of "implicit attitudes" and the various methodologies for measuri...