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Linganisha mbinu

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Affect Misattribution Procedure×Sequential Priming×
NyanjaSaikolojia ya KijamiiSaikolojia ya Kijamii
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Mwaka wa asili20051986
MwanzilishiB. Keith Payne and colleaguesSocial cognition priming tradition (Fazio and colleagues)
AinaImplicit attitude measurement procedureGeneral reaction-time priming framework
Chanzo asiliaPayne, B. K., Cheng, C. M., Govorun, O., & Stewart, B. D. (2005). An inkblot for attitudes: Affect misattribution as implicit measurement. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 89(3), 277-293. DOI ↗Fazio, R. H., Sanbonmatsu, D. M., Powell, M. C., & Kardes, F. R. (1986). On the automatic activation of attitudes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50(2), 229-238. DOI ↗
Majina mbadalaAMP, Affect Misattribution Task, Inkblot for AttitudesPrime-Target Priming, Semantic-Affective Priming, Response-Window Priming
Zinazohusiana33
MuhtasariThe Affect Misattribution Procedure (AMP), introduced by Payne, Cheng, Govorun, and Stewart in 2005, is an implicit measure of attitudes built on a simple cognitive error: people misattribute the feeling evoked by one stimulus to another. On each trial a brief affective prime (such as a Black or White face, or a positive or negative word) is flashed, followed by a neutral target -- typically an unfamiliar Chinese pictograph -- which the participant rates as more or less pleasant than average while being explicitly told to ignore the prime. Because the prime's affect bleeds into the judgment of the ambiguous target, the proportion of pleasant ratings following positive versus negative primes yields an index of the attitude toward the primes. The AMP proved remarkably reliable and resistant to control, and it predicts self-reported attitudes, voting intentions, and intergroup bias, making it one of the most widely used implicit measures alongside the Implicit Association Test.Sequential priming is the general experimental framework underlying many implicit social-cognition measures: a prime is presented, followed after some interval by a target to which the participant responds, and the speed of responding reveals what the prime automatically activated. By varying the prime-target relation (semantic, affective, stereotypic, goal-related) and the stimulus onset asynchrony, researchers can map which associations are activated, how quickly, and whether the activation is automatic or strategic. Short intervals isolate automatic spreading activation that participants cannot control, while longer intervals permit controlled processes. Evaluative priming, affective priming, and stereotype priming are all special cases of this logic, making sequential priming a unifying methodological backbone for studying automatic mental processes in social psychology.
ScholarGateSeti ya data
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  1. v1
  2. 2 Vyanzo
  3. PUBLISHED

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ScholarGateLinganisha mbinu: Affect Misattribution Procedure · Sequential Priming. Imepatikana 2026-06-24 kutoka https://scholargate.app/sw/compare