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Journal ArticleDOI

Processing fluency as a predictor of salience asymmetries in the Implicit Association Test.

TLDR
This work proposes that processing fluency is a more reliable indicator of salience asymmetries in the IAT than are visual search asymmetry, and tests which variable better predicted IAT effects.
Abstract
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is the most popular indirect measure of attitudes in social psychology. Rothermund and Wentura (2001, 2004) suggested that artifacts such as salience asymmetries are a source of compatibility effects in the IAT, and, therefore, the IAT does not necessarily measure attitude. They claim that salience asymmetries correspond with visual search asymmetries, such that the stimulus categories that are more quickly detected in a visual search task are also compatible in the IAT. We propose that processing fluency is a more reliable indicator of salience asymmetries in the IAT than are visual search asymmetries. To test this hypothesis, we set processing fluency in opposition to visual search asymmetry to see which variable better predicted IAT effects. In one pair of categories, the category that was more quickly detected in visual search was also more fluently processed in a binary classification task. In a second pair of categories, the category that was more quickly detected in visual search was the less fluently processed category. Across four experiments, we demonstrated that compatibility effects in the IAT corresponded with differences in processing fluency between categories, rather than with visual search asymmetries.

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Automatic prejudice in childhood and early adolescence.

TL;DR: Although children are assumed to acquire prejudice at much younger ages, automatization of such attitudes might be related to developmental processes in early adolescence, according to a pattern occurred that suggests a linear developmental increase of automatic prejudice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conflicts as aversive signals: Conflict priming increases negative judgments for neutral stimuli

TL;DR: Two experiments were conducted to offer more compelling evidence for the negative valence of conflicts and showed that conflict, as compared with nonconflict, primes led to more negative judgments of subsequently presented neutral target stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding and Using the Brief Implicit Association Test: I. Recommended Scoring Procedures

TL;DR: The present research identified analytical best practices for overall psychometric performance of the BIAT by investigating analytic practices with several evaluation criteria: sensitivity to detecting known effects and group differences, internal consistency, Relations with implicit measures of the same topic, relations with explicit measures ofThe same topic and other criterion variables, and resistance to an extraneous influence of average response time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding and using the brief Implicit Association Test: recommended scoring procedures.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified analytical best practices for overall psychometric performance of the Implicit Association Test (BIAT) and concluded with recommended analytic practices for standard use of the BIAT.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A feature-integration theory of attention

TL;DR: A new hypothesis about the role of focused attention is proposed, which offers a new set of criteria for distinguishing separable from integral features and a new rationale for predicting which tasks will show attention limits and which will not.
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Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test.

TL;DR: An implicit association test (IAT) measures differential association of 2 target concepts with an attribute when instructions oblige highly associated categories to share a response key, and performance is faster than when less associated categories share a key.
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Feature analysis in early vision : evidence from search asymmetries

TL;DR: The results of a series of search experiments are interpreted as evidence that focused attention to single items or to groups is required to reduce background activity when the Weber fraction distinguishing the pooled feature activity with displayscontaining a target and with displays containing only distractors is too small to allow reliable discrimination.
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Emotion drives attention: detecting the snake in the grass.

TL;DR: This paper found that participants specifically fearful of snakes but not spiders (or vice versa) showed facilitated search for the feared objects but did not differ from controls in search for nonfeared fear-relevant or fear-irrelevant, targets.
Journal ArticleDOI

The face in the crowd revisited: a threat advantage with schematic stimuli.

TL;DR: Threatening angry faces were more quickly and accurately detected than were other negative faces (sad or "scheming"), which suggests that the threat advantage can be attributed to threat rather than to the negative valence or the uniqueness of the target display.
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