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Easier done than undone: Asymmetry in the malleability of implicit preferences.
414
Citations
119
References
2006
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryGame TheorySocial PsychologySocial CategorizationCognitionAutomatic AttitudesPsychologySocial SciencesAttitude TheoryBiasExperimental EconomicsDual-process ModelsSocial Learning TheoryUnconscious BiasDecision TheoryMechanism DesignPreference ModelingEconomicsBehavioral SciencesSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceImplicit PreferencesPreference AggregationExperimental PsychologyConcrete LearningSocial CognitionBehavioral EconomicsBusinessPreference ElicitationDecision SciencePersuasion
Dual-process models imply that automatic attitudes should be less flexible than their self-reported counterparts; the relevant empirical record, however, is mixed. To advance the debate, the authors conducted 4 experiments investigating how readily automatic preferences for one imagined social group over another could be induced or reversed. Experiments 1 and 2 revealed that automatic preferences, like self-reported ones, could be readily induced by both abstract supposition and concrete learning. In contrast, Experiments 3 and 4 revealed that newly formed automatic preferences, unlike self-reported ones, could not be readily reversed by either abstract supposition or concrete learning. Thus, the relative inflexibility of implicit attitudes appears to entail, not immunity to sophisticated cognition, nor resistance to swift formation, but insensitivity to modification once formed.
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