Exploring the impact of social judgeability concerns on the interplay of associative and deliberative attitude processes |
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Authors: | Chris Loersch Richard E. Petty |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri, MO, USAb Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, OH, USA |
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Abstract: | Some recent research applying dual-systems logic suggests that different attitude measures reflect independent modes of evaluation with explicit measures primarily affected by deliberative processes and implicit measures primarily affected by automatic processes. In the current work we hypothesized that explicit attitude measures often do not reflect the outcome of automatic or associative processing because social judgeability concerns prevent people from reporting consciously inexplicable “gut feelings” towards the attitude object. To explore this possibility, we simultaneously presented participants with associative and deliberative information about a target person and manipulated their sensitivity to social judgeability concerns with different sets of task instructions. Although an explicit attitude measure was unaffected by subliminally presented associative information following a standard instruction set, this content did impact explicit judgments when social judgeability concerns were assuaged with a “go with your gut” instruction set. |
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Keywords: | Attitudes Persuasion Dual-systems model Evaluation Judgment Social judgeability |
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