학술논문

Incidental Attitude Formation via the Surveillance Task: A Preregistered Replication of the Olson and Fazio (2001) Study
Document Type
Zeitschriftenartikel
journal article
Source
Psychological Science, 32, 1, 120-131
Subject
Psychologie
Psychology
contingency awareness
evaluative conditioning
open data
open materials
preregistered
preregistered replication
recollective memory
Allgemeine Psychologie
General Psychology
Einstellungsbildung
Einstellungsänderung
Konditionierung
Bewusstsein
attitude formation
attitude change
conditioning
consciousness
Language
ISSN
1467-9280
Abstract
Evaluative conditioning is one of the most widely studied procedures for establishing and changing attitudes. The surveillance task is a highly cited evaluative-conditioning paradigm and one that is claimed to generate attitudes without awareness. The potential for evaluative-conditioning effects to occur without awareness continues to fuel conceptual, theoretical, and applied developments. Yet few published studies have used this task, and most are characterized by small samples and small effect sizes. We conducted a high-powered (N = 1,478 adult participants), preregistered close replication of the original surveillance-task study (Olson & Fazio, 2001). We obtained evidence for a small evaluative-conditioning effect when "aware" participants were excluded using the original criterion - therefore replicating the original effect. However, no such effect emerged when three other awareness criteria were used. We suggest that there is a need for caution when using evidence from the surveillance-task effect to make theoretical and practical claims about "unaware" evaluative-conditioning effects.