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Chris Loersch

Researcher at University of Colorado Boulder

Publications -  16
Citations -  826

Chris Loersch is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: Priming (psychology) & Misattribution of memory. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 16 publications receiving 742 citations. Previous affiliations of Chris Loersch include University of Missouri & Ohio State University.

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The Situated Inference Model An Integrative Account of the Effects of Primes on Perception, Behavior, and Motivation

TL;DR: The situated inference model of priming is introduced, its potential to account for divergent outcomes with one mechanism is discussed, and its ability to organize the priming literatures surrounding these effects is demonstrated.
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Toward a comprehensive understanding of executive cognitive function in implicit racial bias.

TL;DR: The main findings were that measures of implicit bias were only weakly intercorrelated, and EF and estimates of automatic processes both predicted implicit bias and also interacted, such that the relation between automatic processes and bias expression was reduced at higher levels of EF.
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The influence of social groups on goal contagion

TL;DR: Aarts et al. as mentioned in this paper found that goal contagion is more likely between people who belong to the same groups and observed that participants were more likely to take on the goal of individuals who belonged to their same university.
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From Primed Construct to Motivated Behavior Validation Processes in Goal Pursuit

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the impact of goal primes on behavior occurs to a greater extent when conditions foster confidence (vs. doubt) in mental contents, and when conditions Foster doubt, goal priming effects are eliminated or counter to the implications of the prime.
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Replicable effects of primes on human behavior.

TL;DR: A within-subjects procedure for priming behavior, in which participants decide whether to bet or pass on each trial of a gambling game, provides evidence that primes can reliably affect behavior, under at least some conditions, without intention.