Authors
Patrick S Forscher, Calvin K Lai, Jordan R Axt, Charles R Ebersole, Michelle Herman, Patricia G Devine, Brian A Nosek
Publication date
2019/9
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
117
Issue
3
Pages
522
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Using a novel technique known as network meta-analysis, we synthesized evidence from 492 studies (87,418 participants) to investigate the effectiveness of procedures in changing implicit measures, which we define as response biases on implicit tasks. We also evaluated these procedures’ effects on explicit and behavioral measures. We found that implicit measures can be changed, but effects are often relatively weak (| ds|<. 30). Most studies focused on producing short-term changes with brief, single-session manipulations. Procedures that associate sets of concepts, invoke goals or motivations, or tax mental resources changed implicit measures the most, whereas procedures that induced threat, affirmation, or specific moods/emotions changed implicit measures the least. Bias tests suggested that implicit effects could be inflated relative to their true population values. Procedures changed explicit measures less …
Total citations
2018201920202021202220232024509313113916912673
Scholar articles
PS Forscher, CK Lai, JR Axt, CR Ebersole, M Herman… - Journal of personality and social psychology, 2019
PS Forscher, CK Lai, JR Axt, CR Ebersole, M Herman… - 2017