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When are social judgments made? Evidence for the spontaneousness of trait inferences.
525
Citations
26
References
1984
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingNeurolinguisticsSocial PsychologySocial CategorizationPsycholinguisticsCognitionHuman MemoryExplicit MemoryPsychologySocial SciencesBiasSocial ReasoningMemoryLanguage StudiesUnconscious BiasCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesHuman CognitionSpecificity ParadigmTrait InferencesExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionImplicit MemorySocial BiasSocial JudgmentsAssociative Memory (Psychology)Social BehaviorMemory InstructionsSocial Judgment
Do people make trait inferences, even without intentions or instructions, at the encoding stage of processing behavioral information? Tulving's encoding specificity paradigm (Tulving & Thomson, 1973) was adapted for two recall experiments. Under memory instructions only, subjects read sentences describing people performing actions that implied traits. Later, subjects recalled each sentence under one of three cuing conditions: (a) a dispositional cue (e.g., generous), (b) a strong, nondispositional semantic associate to an important sentence word; or (c) no cue. Recall was best when cued by the disposition words. Subjects were unaware of having made trait inferences. Interpreted in terms of encoding specificity, these results indicate that subjects unintentionally made trait inferences at encoding. This suggests that attributions may be made spontaneously, as part of the routine comprehension of social events.
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