Search results for "Implicit"

showing 10 items of 287 documents

Implicitly measured aggressiveness self-concepts in women with borderline personality disorder as assessed by an Implicit Association Test.

2020

Abstract Background Aggressiveness resulting from inappropriately intense anger plays a major role in borderline personality disorder (BPD) and research using self-report measures has consistently found elevated levels of aggression in this condition. However, while self-report assesses explicit dimensions of the self-concept, it cannot elucidate implicit processes that are at least equally important as they guide the perceptions of the self and influence behavioral responses. The present study aimed to extend the research on aggressiveness self-concepts in BPD utilizing an indirect latency-based measure. Methods Twenty-nine female inpatients with BPD and 21 healthy women were assessed with…

Adult050103 clinical psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAnger03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Borderline Personality DisorderGermanymental disordersInjury preventionmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneralizability theoryBorderline personality disordermedia_commonAggression05 social sciencesImplicit-association testHuman factors and ergonomicsmedicine.diseaseSelf Concept030227 psychiatryAggressionPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyCase-Control StudiesFemaleSelf Reportmedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry
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Priming index of the Spanish word fragments from the Dasí, Soler, and Ruiz (2004) database

2007

Word-fragment completion is a frequently used test in implicit memory research. A database of 196 Spanish fragments was recently published (Dasi, Soler, & Ruiz, 2004) in which the fragments were described for indices, such as difficulty, familiarity, frequency, number of meanings, and so on (www.psychonomic.org/archive). In this work, a new index, thepriming index, is described for the same 196 fragments. This index is calculated for each fragment by subtracting the difficulty index (the proportion of correct completion when the fragment is not studied) from the proportion of correct completion when the fragment is studied, and it means the capacity of an item to be primed. In order to dete…

AdultAdolescentDatabaseAbstracting and IndexingComputer scienceExperimental and Cognitive Psychologycomputer.software_genreVocabularyDatabases as TopicArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Index (publishing)Fragment (logic)MemoryResearch DesignSpainDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansPsychology (miscellaneous)Implicit memorycomputerPriming (psychology)General PsychologyWord (group theory)Behavior Research Methods
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The use of control groups in artificial grammar learning.

2003

Experimenters assume that participants of an experimental group have learned an artificial grammar if they classify test items with significantly higher accuracy than does a control group without training. The validity of such a comparison, however, depends on an additivity assumption: Learning is superimposed on the action of non-specific variables—for example, repetitions of letters, which modulate the performance of the experimental group and the control group to the same extent. In two experiments we were able to show that this additivity assumption does not hold. Grammaticality classifications in control groups without training (Experiments 1 and 2) depended on non-specific features. T…

AdultArtificial grammar learningmedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyHumansLearning0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesControl (linguistics)StudentsGeneral Psychologymedia_commonLanguageGrammarGroup (mathematics)Teaching05 social sciencesCognitionControl GroupsImplicit learningTest (assessment)Regression AnalysisGrammaticalityFrancePsychologyCognitive psychologyThe Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology
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Implicit Theories of Child Sexual Exploitation Material Offenders: Cross-Cultural Validation of Interview Findings

2019

Offense-supportive cognitions are thought to result from underlying implicit theories (ITs). As child sexual exploitation material (CSEM) users are a distinct type of sex offender, Bartels and Merdian proposed that CSEM offenders hold five different ITs from those endorsed by contact sex offenders (i.e., Unhappy World, Self as Uncontrollable, Child as Sexual Object, Nature of Harm [CSEM variant], and Self as Collector), linked by an assumption about the Reinforcing Nature of the Internet. This article reports a conceptual content analysis of 23 interviews conducted with CSEM offenders in the United Kingdom and Spain. Support for all CSEM-specific ITs was found across both samples, providing…

AdultCross-Cultural ComparisonPoison controlSuicide preventionPathology and Forensic MedicineInterviews as TopicCognitionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)EroticaHumansCross-cultural0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildApplied PsychologyImplicit personality theoryInternetConceptualizationSex offender050901 criminology05 social sciencesHuman factors and ergonomicsChild Abuse SexualUnited KingdomHarmSpain0509 other social sciencesPsychological TheoryPsychologySocial psychology050104 developmental & child psychologyInternational Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
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Implicit versus explicit attitude to doping: which better predicts athletes’ vigilance towards unintentional doping?

2018

Abstract Objectives This preliminary study examined whether implicit doping attitude, explicit doping attitude, or both, predicted athletes’ vigilance towards unintentional doping. Design A cross-sectional correlational design. Methods Australian athletes (N = 143; Mage = 18.13, SD = 4.63) completed measures of implicit doping attitude (brief single-category implicit association test), explicit doping attitude (Performance Enhancement Attitude Scale), avoidance of unintentional doping (Self-Reported Treatment Adherence Scale), and behavioural vigilance task of unintentional doping (reading the ingredients of an unfamiliar food product). Results Positive implicit doping attitude and explicit…

AdultMaleAdolescentTreatment adherencePerformance-enhancing drugsmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationAttitude scaledoping050105 experimental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesC890 Psychology not elsewhere classified0302 clinical medicineC841 Health PsychologyC810 Applied PsychologyurheiluAvoidance LearningHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOrthopedics and Sports Medicineta315implicit association testmedia_commondoping in sportDoping in Sports05 social sciencesAustraliaImplicit-association testprohibited substances030229 sport sciencesC800 PsychologyCross-Sectional StudiesAttitudeAthletesUnintentional dopingLinear Modelsperformance enhancing drugsFemaleImplicit attitudePsychologyPerformance enhancementSocial psychologyVigilance (psychology)
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The Influence of University Students’ Stress Mindsets on Health and Performance Outcomes

2018

Background Emerging evidence indicates that holding particular stress mindsets has favorable implications for peoples’ health and performance under stress. Purpose The aim of the current study was to examine the processes by which implicit and explicit stress mindsets relate to health- and performance-related outcomes. Specifically, we propose a stress beliefs model in which somatic responses to stress and coping behaviors mediate the effect of stress mindsets on outcomes. Methods Undergraduate university students (N  =  218, n = 144 females) aged 17– 25 years completed measures of stress mindset, physical and psychological wellbeing, perceived stress, perceived  somatic responses to stress…

AdultMaleAdolescentUniversitiesHealth StatusmindsetsPsychological interventionperformance outcomes050109 social psychologyMindsetPersonal Satisfaction050105 experimental psychologyajattelutavatDevelopmental psychologyFormative assessmentYoung AdultstressAcademic PerformanceAdaptation PsychologicalHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStress measuresta315Path analysis (statistics)ta515General PsychologysuorituskykyProactive copingopiskelijatstudents05 social sciencesImplicit-association testhealthstressiProactivityPsychiatry and Mental healthQuality of LifeFemalePsychologyterveysStress PsychologicalAnnals of Behavioral Medicine
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Is an attention-based associative account of adjacent and nonadjacent dependency learning valid?

2014

Pacton and Perruchet (2008) reported that participants who were asked to process adjacent elements located within a sequence of digits learned adjacent dependencies but did not learn nonadjacent dependencies and conversely, participants who were asked to process nonadjacent digits learned nonadjacent dependencies but did not learn adjacent dependencies. In the present study, we showed that when participants were simply asked to read aloud the same sequences of digits, a task demand that did not require the intentional processing of specific elements as in standard statistical learning tasks, only adjacent dependencies were learned. The very same pattern was observed when digits were replace…

AdultMaleCommunicationSequenceDependency (UML)business.industryComputer scienceSpeech recognitionAssociation LearningExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeneral MedicineImplicit learningAssociative learningArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyHumansAttentionFemalebusinessRepresentation (mathematics)Association (psychology)Associative propertyEvent (probability theory)Acta psychologica
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More on magnitude of priming in implicit memory tasks.

2002

The effects of word frequency, length of the word, and type of word Fragment in a fragment-completion test were investigated with 57 undergraduate students, 19–22 years. Priming with better performance on studied than on nonstudied words in this task was greater for low frequency words than for high frequency words and greater for fragments without the first letter than for fragments with the first letter. It was inferred that characteristics of fragments should be considered in any implicit memory task when the magnitude of priming is of interest. In general, word fragment-completion processes appear to be based on sources of information available in visual identification tasks.

AdultMaleComputer science050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySemantics050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)Fragment (logic)Indirect tests of memoryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAttention05 social sciencesRetention PsychologyPaired-Associate LearningSensory SystemsSemanticsWord lists by frequencyPractice PsychologicalMental RecallFemaleImplicit memoryCuesPriming (psychology)Word (computer architecture)Cognitive psychologyPerceptual and motor skills
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Implicit memory functioning in schizophrenia: Explaining inconsistent findings of word stem completion tasks

2014

The definitive implicit memory profile of schizophrenia is yet to be clarified. Methodological differences between studies could be the reason for the inconsistent findings reported. In this study, we have examined implicit memory functioning using a word stem completion task. In addition, we have addressed methodological issues related with lexical and perceptual stimuli characteristics, and with the strategy used to calculate priming scores. Our data show similar performance values in schizophrenic patients and healthy controls. Furthermore, we have not detected significant differences in priming between the two groups, even when this parameter was calculated using three different procedu…

AdultMaleConcept Formationmedia_common.quotation_subjectSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Word stemNeuropsychological TestsTask (project management)Developmental psychologyPerceptionIndirect tests of memoryReaction TimeHumansBiological Psychiatrymedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceMemory DisordersMiddle AgedVerbal LearningPsychiatry and Mental healthPattern Recognition VisualSchizophreniaFemaleImplicit memoryPsychologyPriming (psychology)Photic StimulationWord (computer architecture)Cognitive psychologyPsychiatry Research
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Perceptual priming in schizophrenia evaluated by word fragment and word stem completion

2011

Implicit memory seems to be preserved in schizophrenia as a whole, but dissociations between conceptual and perceptual tasks and between accuracy and reaction time measures have appeared. The present research has revealed some methodological limitations in many studies to date that are focused on the study of perceptual implicit memory in schizophrenic patients using accuracy measures. The review of these studies revealed that limitations are related to an inadequate definition of performance and priming measures, a lack of control over the characteristics of the stimuli, and the absence of information on the experimental procedures used in data collection. Moreover, the task used in these …

AdultMaleConcept Formationmedia_common.quotation_subjectSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Word stemNeuropsychological TestsVerbal learningVocabularyTask (project management)Indirect tests of memoryPerceptionReaction TimeHumansBiological Psychiatrymedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceMemory DisordersMiddle AgedVerbal LearningPsychiatry and Mental healthPattern Recognition VisualSchizophreniaFemaleImplicit memoryPsychologyPriming (psychology)Photic Stimulationpsychological phenomena and processesCognitive psychologyPsychiatry Research
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