1. Cognitive Control and the Implicit Association Test: A Replication of Siegel, Dougherty, and Huber (2012)
- Author
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Michael R. Dougherty, Victoria Garriques, Leigh Gulbransen, Maya Lewis, Julia Hatch, Elinor Stern, Rabbiya Iqbal, Harry Calvert, Serra A Erbas, David J. Johnson, Alison Robey, and David Ampofo
- Subjects
Replication (statistics) ,Implicit-association test ,Cognition ,Control (linguistics) ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The implicit association test (IAT) is widely used to measure evaluative associations towards groups or the self but is influenced by other traits. Siegel, Dougherty, and Huber (2012, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology) found that manipulating cognitive control via false feedback (Study 3) changed the degree to which the IAT was related to cognitive control versus evaluative associations. We conducted two replications of this study and a mini meta-analysis. Null-hypothesis tests, meta-analysis, and a small telescope approach demonstrated weak to no support for the original hypotheses. We conclude that the original findings are unreliable and that both the original study and our replications do not provide evidence that manipulating cognitive control affects IAT scores.
- Published
- 2021
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