
doi: 10.1037/a0028764
pmid: 22663350
When forming impressions about other people, stereotypes about the individual's social group often influence the resulting impression. At least 2 distinguishable processes underlie stereotypic impression formation: stereotype activation and stereotype application. Most previous research has used implicit measures to assess stereotype activation and explicit measures to assess stereotype application, which has several disadvantages. The authors propose a measure of stereotypic impression formation, the stereotype misperception task (SMT), together with a multinomial model that quantitatively disentangles the contributions of stereotype activation and application to responses in the SMT. The validity of the SMT and of the multinomial model was confirmed in 5 studies. The authors hope to advance research on stereotyping by providing a measurement tool that separates multiple processes underlying impression formation.
Marketing, Male, Psychological Tests, Stereotyping, Social and personality psychology, Social Psychology, Black People, Social and Personality Psychology, White People, Judgment, Social Perception, Face, Psychology, Humans, Cognitive Sciences, Female, Cognitive and computational psychology, Photic Stimulation
Marketing, Male, Psychological Tests, Stereotyping, Social and personality psychology, Social Psychology, Black People, Social and Personality Psychology, White People, Judgment, Social Perception, Face, Psychology, Humans, Cognitive Sciences, Female, Cognitive and computational psychology, Photic Stimulation
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