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Accuracy motivation attenuates covert priming: The systematic reprocessing of social information.
216
Citations
81
References
1994
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingAccuracy MotivationSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceCommunicationMisinformationSelf-monitoringPsychologySocial SciencesSystematic ReprocessingBiasUnconscious BiasSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceManipulation (Psychology)Accuracy-motivated SsInformation BehaviorSuperficial ProcessingTarget PersonApplied Social PsychologyExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionCovert PrimingAttribution TheoryArtsDeception DetectionPersuasion
Three studies tested the hypothesis that assimilation of impressions to primed constructs is a product of relatively superficial processing and is unlikely to occur when behavioral information about a target person is processed systematically. In Study 1, the impressions of accuracy-motivated Ss did not assimilate to covertly primed trait constructs, although the impressions of unmotivated Ss did. Studies 2 and 3 showed that when Ss become accuracy motivated after exposure to target information, both retrieval of that information and opportunity for effeortful processing of it were necessary to eliminate assimilation effects. In addition, accuracy-motivated Ss showed no special attention to primes or awareness of their influence on judgment
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