Readings in Social Psychology: The Art and Science of Research |
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Page 118
... significantly preferred individualistic ads ( t ( 63 ) = 4.43 ; p < .0001 ) , whereas Korean subjects did not show a significant preference ( t ( 63 ) = 1.01 ; n.s. ) . These differences , however , depended on the type of product being ...
... significantly preferred individualistic ads ( t ( 63 ) = 4.43 ; p < .0001 ) , whereas Korean subjects did not show a significant preference ( t ( 63 ) = 1.01 ; n.s. ) . These differences , however , depended on the type of product being ...
Page 153
... significantly different from each other . Significant differences emerged in simple effects tests comparing payment ... significantly . However , compared with this base level , the one - step overpaid group was significantly more ...
... significantly different from each other . Significant differences emerged in simple effects tests comparing payment ... significantly . However , compared with this base level , the one - step overpaid group was significantly more ...
Page 154
... significantly correlated with each other ( r = .03 ) . The statistical inde- pendence of these measures justifies the use of separate uni- variate analyses . As in the case of the performance measure , a set of pre- liminary analyses ...
... significantly correlated with each other ( r = .03 ) . The statistical inde- pendence of these measures justifies the use of separate uni- variate analyses . As in the case of the performance measure , a set of pre- liminary analyses ...
Contents
Teacher Expectations for the Disadvantaged | 3 |
READING | 8 |
Biases in Perceptions | 19 |
Copyright | |
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academic accurate action potential activity advertising aggression alcohol analysis analysis of variance ANOVA appeals asked attribution attribution theory average Bargh behavioral confirmation Berkowitz cognitive collectivistic college GPA cues cultural differences dissonance equity theory estimated SAT score expected experiment experimental social psychology explain extrinsic factors help condition Higgins hyperaccessibility individual individualistic inhibition interaction intrinsic interest jects Journal of Personality lexical decision task male perceivers manipulation means measure ment misreporting myopia negative affect observed overjustification effect participants perception performance Personality and Social physical attractiveness positive affect predicted pretrial publicity prior persuasion procedure question questionnaire ratings rebound effects received relevant reported SAT score required to help response reward score as inaccurate self-fulfilling prophecy self-perception theory shared products shock significant significantly Social Psychology social stereotypes stereo subjects suggests suppression target task teachers theory thought suppression tion unwanted thoughts voir dire Wegner
References to this book
The Psychology of Prejudice and Discrimination: Bias based on ..., Volume 3 Jean Lau Chin No preview available - 2004 |