Publication | Closed Access
Predicting Spontaneous Big Five Behavior with Implicit Association Tests
174
Citations
26
References
2006
Year
Behavioral SciencesCognitive SciencePersonality PsychologyImplicit MeasuresSelf-monitoringSocial BehaviorSocial PsychologyBehavior PredictionSocial SciencesSpontaneous BehaviorSpontaneous Big FiveReaction TimesSocial CognitionPsychologyBehavior Characteristic
According to theories brought forward recently, implicit measures based on reaction times, for instance Implicit Association Tests (IATs), should predict spontaneous behavior better than explicit measures. We applied five IATs to the measurement of the Big Five personality factors and tested whether the IATs predicted spontaneous behavior. The results show that, although implicit and explicit measures of personality dimensions were related at times, the correlations between them and with behavior suggest that these constructs should be differentiated. IATs predicted spontaneous behavior, but explicit measures did not. In contrast, explicit measures, but not IATs, were related to transparent self-ratings of behavior.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1