Publication | Closed Access
The social psychology of perception experiments: Hills, backpacks, glucose, and the problem of generalizability.
118
Citations
45
References
2012
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyField ExperimentEnvironmental PsychologySocial CategorizationPerceptionBlood Glucose ManipulationSocial SciencesPsychologyEnvironmental BehaviorHill OrientationPsychophysicsPerception SystemBehavioral SciencesSocial EnvironmentPerception ExperimentsApplied Social PsychologyExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionSocial BehaviorExperiment DesignBehavioral Experiments
Experiments take place in a physical environment but also a social environment. Generalizability from experimental manipulations to more typical contexts may be limited by violations of ecological validity with respect to either the physical or the social environment. A replication and extension of a recent study (a blood glucose manipulation) was conducted to investigate the effects of experimental demand (a social artifact) on participant behaviors judging the geographical slant of a large-scale outdoor hill. Three different assessments of experimental demand indicate that even when the physical environment is naturalistic, and the goal of the main experimental manipulation was primarily concealed, artificial aspects of the social environment (such as an explicit requirement to wear a heavy backpack while estimating the slant of a hill) may still be primarily responsible for altered judgments of hill orientation.
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