Easier done than undone: asymmetry in the malleability of implicit preferences.

Dual-process models imply that automatic attitudes should be less flexible than their self-reported counterparts; the relevant empirical record, however, is mixed. To advance the debate, the authors conducted 4 experiments investigating how readily automatic preferences for one imagined social group over another could be induced or reversed. Experiments 1 and 2 revealed that automatic preferences, like self-reported ones, could be readily induced by both abstract supposition and concrete learning. In contrast, Experiments 3 and 4 revealed that newly formed automatic preferences, unlike self-reported ones, could not be readily reversed by either abstract supposition or concrete learning. Thus, the relative inflexibility of implicit attitudes appears to entail, not immunity to sophisticated cognition, nor resistance to swift formation, but insensitivity to modification once formed.

[1]  A. Dijksterhuis,et al.  I like myself but I don't know why: enhancing implicit self-esteem by subliminal evaluative conditioning. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[2]  Beate Seibt,et al.  Prepared to eat: How immediate affective and motivational responses to food cues are influenced by food deprivation. , 2007 .

[3]  D. Shanks,et al.  Characteristics of dissociable human learning systems , 1994, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[4]  J. N. Bassili Cognitive Indices of Social Information Processing , 2007 .

[5]  J. Pennebaker,et al.  Stalking the perfect measure of implicit self-esteem: the blind men and the elephant revisited? , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[6]  Patrick T. Vargas,et al.  The Linguistic Intergroup Bias As an Implicit Indicator of Prejudice , 1997 .

[7]  James Jaccard,et al.  Arbitrary metrics in psychology. , 2006, The American psychologist.

[8]  S. M. Baker,et al.  Measurement of Racial Stereotype Subtyping , 1991 .

[9]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: the implicit association test. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[10]  K. Vohs,et al.  Case Western Reserve University , 1990 .

[11]  A. Greenwald,et al.  The Implicit Association Test as a measure of implicit consumer attitudes , 2001 .

[12]  N. Anderson Foundations of information integration theory , 1981 .

[13]  P. Converse,et al.  Attitudes and Non-attitudes: Continuation of a Dialogue , 1970 .

[14]  M. Banaji,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Ethnocentrism: Revisiting the Ideologies of Prejudice , 2004, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[15]  M. Banaji,et al.  When fair is foul and foul is fair: reverse priming in automatic evaluation. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[16]  A. McConnell,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Measures of Sexual Orientation Attitudes: In Group Preferences and Related Behaviors and Beliefs among Gay and Straight Men , 2004, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[17]  Do-Yeong Kim Voluntary Controllability of the Implicit Association Test (IAT) , 2003 .

[18]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Contextual variations in implicit evaluation. , 2003, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[19]  J. Dovidio,et al.  Just say no (to stereotyping): effects of training in the negation of stereotypic associations on stereotype activation. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[20]  A. Lenton,et al.  Imagining stereotypes away: the moderation of implicit stereotypes through mental imagery. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[21]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Math = male, me = female, therefore math not = me. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  Eliot R. Smith,et al.  What do connectionism and social psychology offer each other? , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[23]  S. Sloman Two systems of reasoning. , 2002 .

[24]  S. Chaiken,et al.  The generality of the automatic attitude activation effect. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[25]  Marcia K. Johnson,et al.  Do alcoholic Korsakoff's syndrome patients acquire affective reactions? , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[26]  Boris Egloff,et al.  Predictive validity of an Implicit Association Test for assessing anxiety. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  A. van Knippenberg,et al.  What's in a name: implicit self-esteem and the automatic self. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[28]  Bertram Gawronski,et al.  On the propositional nature of cognitive consistency: Dissonance changes explicit, but not implicit attitudes , 2004 .

[29]  P. Thagard,et al.  FORMING IMPRESSIONS FROM STEREOTYPES, TRAITS, AND BEHAVIORS : A PARALLEL-CONSTRAINT-SATISFACTION THEORY , 1996 .

[30]  H. Young Self-knowledge and self-deception , 2008 .

[31]  Sean A. Spence,et al.  Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain , 1995 .

[32]  S. McFarland,et al.  A COGNITIVE SKILL CONFOUND ON THE IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST , 2002 .

[33]  Z. Kunda,et al.  Reactions to a black professional: motivated inhibition and activation of conflicting stereotypes. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[34]  N. Schwarz,et al.  Attitudes, persuasion, and behavior , 2007 .

[35]  S. Koole,et al.  On the nature of implicit self-esteem: The case of the name letter effect. , 2002 .

[36]  Michael A. Olson,et al.  Implicit acquisition and manifestation of classically conditioned attitudes. , 2002 .

[37]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The aversive form of racism. , 1986 .

[38]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Blackwell handbook of social psychology: Intraindividual processes , 2001 .

[39]  F. Crosby,et al.  Recent unobtrusive studies of Black and White discrimination and prejudice: A literature review. , 1980 .

[40]  J. Dovidio,et al.  On the nature of contemporary prejudice: The causes, consequences, and challenges of aversive racism. , 1998 .

[41]  C. Judd,et al.  Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measures. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[42]  Curtis D. Hardin,et al.  Automatic Stereotyping , 1996 .

[43]  Timothy D. Wilson,et al.  Telling more than we can know: Verbal reports on mental processes. , 1977 .

[44]  I. Blair,et al.  The Malleability of Automatic Stereotypes and Prejudice , 2002 .

[45]  P. Devine Implicit prejudice and stereotyping: how automatic are they? Introduction to the special section. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[46]  Aimée M. Surprenant,et al.  Implicit attitudes can be measured. , 2001 .

[47]  I. Blair,et al.  Implicit stereotypes and prejudice. , 2001 .

[48]  B. R. Schlenker,et al.  Self-presentation: managing the impression of consistency when reality interferes with self-enhancement. , 1975, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[49]  Christina T. Fong,et al.  Automatic Activation of Stereotypes: The Role of Self-Image Threat , 1998 .

[50]  E.,et al.  The evolution of theory and research in social psychology: From single to multiple effect and process models of persuasion. , 1997 .

[51]  R. Petty,et al.  Attitude strength : antecedents and consequences , 1995 .

[52]  J. H. Neely Semantic priming and retrieval from lexical memory: Roles of inhibitionless spreading activation and limited-capacity attention. , 1977 .

[53]  B. Pelham,et al.  Two Roads to Positive Regard: Implicit and Explicit Self-Evaluation and Culture , 1999 .

[54]  Jan De Houwer,et al.  A structural analysis of indirect measures of attitudes , 2003 .

[55]  M. Riketta,et al.  Manipulating self-esteem with subliminally presented words. , 2003 .

[56]  Eliot R. Smith,et al.  Associative and rule-based processing: A connectionist interpretation of dual-process models. , 1999 .

[57]  Seymour Epstein,et al.  Some basic issues regarding dual-process theories from the perspective of cognitive–experiential self-theory. , 1999 .

[58]  N. Dasgupta,et al.  The Opposite of a Great Truth Is Also True: When Do Student Samples Help Versus Hurt the Scientific Study of Prejudice? , 2008 .

[59]  Jan De Houwer,et al.  An Affective Variant of the Simon Paradigm , 1998 .

[60]  Luigi Castelli,et al.  On the Activation of Social Stereotypes: The Moderating Role of Processing Objectives , 1997 .

[61]  C. Judd,et al.  Spontaneous prejudice in context: variability in automatically activated attitudes. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[62]  William A. Cunningham,et al.  Performance on Indirect Measures of Race Evaluation Predicts Amygdala Activation , 2000, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[63]  P. Niedenthal,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Components of Prejudice , 2000 .

[64]  Optimally conceptualizing implicit self-esteem , 2003 .

[65]  Laurie A. Rudman,et al.  "Unlearning" automatic biases: the malleability of implicit prejudice and stereotypes. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[66]  William A. Cunningham,et al.  Intact performance on an indirect measure of race bias following amygdala damage , 2003, Neuropsychologia.

[67]  E. Harmon-Jones,et al.  The regulation of explicit and implicit race bias: the role of motivations to respond without prejudice. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[68]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Implicit partisanship: taking sides for no reason. , 2002, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[69]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment , 2002 .

[70]  Timothy D. Wilson,et al.  A model of dual attitudes. , 2000, Psychological review.

[71]  James W. Pennebaker,et al.  The Handbook of Mental Control , 1992 .

[72]  John T. Cacioppo,et al.  Rudimentary determinants of attitudes: Classical conditioning is more effective when prior knowledge about the attitude stimulus is low than high , 1992 .

[73]  Eliot R. Smith,et al.  On the automatic evaluation of social exemplars. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[74]  S. Chaiken,et al.  Dual-process theories in social psychology , 1999 .

[75]  Melanie C Steffens,et al.  Implicit Association Test: separating transsituationally stable and variable components of attitudes toward gay men. , 2003, Experimental psychology.

[76]  H. Damasio,et al.  Characterization of the decision-making deficit of patients with ventromedial prefrontal cortex lesions. , 2000, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[77]  P. Devine,et al.  Internal and external motivation to respond without prejudice , 1998 .

[78]  Rupert Brown,et al.  Category and stereotype activation: Is prejudice inevitable? , 1997 .

[79]  Peter F. Lovibond,et al.  Measuring evaluative conditioning using the Implicit Association Test , 2003 .

[80]  Blair T. Johnson,et al.  Heart versus reason in condom use: implicit versus explicit attitudinal predictors of sexual behavior. , 2001, Zeitschrift fur experimentelle Psychologie : Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie.

[81]  S. Alexander Haslam,et al.  The message of social psychology: Perspectives on mind in society. , 1997 .

[82]  J. S. Nairne,et al.  The nature of remembering : essays in honor of Robert G. Crowder , 2001 .

[83]  Cassandra L. Govan,et al.  Changing the affective valence of the stimulus items influences the IAT by re-defining the category labels , 2004 .

[84]  A. Hofmeister,et al.  Mantle values of thermal conductivity and the geotherm from phonon lifetimes , 1999, Science.

[85]  A. McConnell,et al.  Relations among the Implicit Association Test, Discriminatory Behavior, and Explicit Measures of Racial Attitudes , 2001 .

[86]  R. Neumann,et al.  Attitudes towards people with AIDS and avoidance behavior: Automatic and reflective bases of behavior , 2004 .

[87]  Delroy L. Paulhus,et al.  Self-Deception: An Adaptive Mechanism? , 1988 .

[88]  A G Greenwald,et al.  Unconscious processing of dichoptically masked words , 1989, Memory & cognition.

[89]  M. Steffens Is the implicit association test immune to faking? , 2004, Experimental psychology.

[90]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Math = male, me = female, therefore math ≠ me. , 2002 .

[91]  J Richard Eiser,et al.  Attitude formation through exploration: valence asymmetries. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[92]  J. Dovidio,et al.  On the nature of prejudice: Automatic and controlled processes , 1997 .

[93]  Bertram Gawronski What does the implicit association test measure? A test of the convergent and discriminant validity of prejudice-related IATs. , 2002, Experimental psychology.

[94]  D. Gilbert,et al.  The trouble of thinking: Activation and application of stereotypic beliefs. , 1991 .

[95]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Understanding and using the implicit association test: I. An improved scoring algorithm. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[96]  Z. Segal,et al.  Mood-induced changes on the Implicit Association Test in recovered depressed patients. , 2001, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[97]  M. Banaji,et al.  Automatic and Controlled Processes in Stereotype Priming , 1996 .

[98]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  THE GO/NO-GO ASSOCIATION TASK , 2001 .

[99]  A. Damasio,et al.  Insensitivity to future consequences following damage to human prefrontal cortex , 1994, Cognition.

[100]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The Reliability of Implicit Stereotyping , 2001 .

[101]  Edward R. Tufte,et al.  The quantitative analysis of social problems , 1971 .

[102]  R. Banse,et al.  Implicit attitudes towards homosexuality: reliability, validity, and controllability of the IAT. , 2001, Zeitschrift fur experimentelle Psychologie : Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie.

[103]  John R. Searle,et al.  The Rediscovery of the Mind , 1995, Artif. Intell..

[104]  S. Fiske,et al.  Confronting Racism: The Problem and the Response , 1998 .

[105]  Curtis D. Hardin,et al.  Unconscious Unease and Self-Handicapping: Behavioral Consequences of Individual Differences in Implicit and Explicit Self-Esteem , 1999 .

[106]  R. Fazio On the automatic activation of associated evaluations: An overview , 2001 .

[107]  D. Wentura,et al.  Figure-ground asymmetries in the Implicit Association Test (IAT). , 2001, Zeitschrift fur experimentelle Psychologie : Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie.

[108]  E. Harmon-Jones,et al.  Cognitive dissonance: Progress on a pivotal theory in social psychology. , 1999 .

[109]  Adam Kowol The theory of cognitive dissonance By , 2008 .

[110]  R. Fazio,et al.  Variability in automatic activation as an unobtrusive measure of racial attitudes: a bona fide pipeline? , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[111]  P. Devine Stereotypes and prejudice: Their automatic and controlled components. , 1989 .

[112]  Michael A. Olson,et al.  Implicit Attitude Formation Through Classical Conditioning , 2001, Psychological science.

[113]  C. Mitchell Mere acceptance produces apparent attitude in the Implicit Association Test , 2004 .

[114]  A. Elliot,et al.  Prejudice with and without compunction , 1991 .

[115]  B. Teachman,et al.  Implicit associations for fear-relevant stimuli among individuals with snake and spider fears. , 2001, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[116]  Constantine Sedikides,et al.  Portraits of the self , 2003 .

[117]  B. Teachman,et al.  Automatic processing in spider phobia: implicit fear associations over the course of treatment. , 2003, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[118]  J. Dovidio,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Prejudice and Interracial Interaction , 2002 .

[119]  D. Funder,et al.  Towards a balanced social psychology: Causes, consequences, and cures for the problem-seeking approach to social behavior and cognition , 2004, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[120]  M. Banaji,et al.  Implicit social cognition: attitudes, self-esteem, and stereotypes. , 1995, Psychological review.

[121]  R. Banse,et al.  PERSONALITY PROCESSES AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES Double Dissociation Between Implicit and Explicit Personality Self-Concept: The Case of Shy Behavior , 2002 .

[122]  R. Baumeister A SELF-PRESENTATIONAL VIEW OF SOCIAL PHENOMENA , 1982 .

[123]  J. Hilton,et al.  Attitudes and the Implicit Association Test. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[124]  S. Fiske,et al.  The Handbook of Social Psychology , 1935 .

[125]  F. Strack,et al.  Reflective and Impulsive Determinants of Social Behavior , 2004, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[126]  Nalini Ambady,et al.  Effects of situational power on automatic racial prejudice , 2001 .

[127]  U. Mayr,et al.  The power of a story: New, automatic associations from a single reading of a short scenario , 2005, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[128]  Timothy D. Wilson,et al.  Introspection, Attitude Change, and Attitude-Behavior Consistency: the Disruptive Effects of Explaining Why we Feel the Way we Do , 1989 .

[129]  J. de Houwer,et al.  Associative learning of likes and dislikes: a review of 25 years of research on human evaluative conditioning. , 2001, Psychological bulletin.

[130]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Using the implicit association test to measure self-esteem and self-concept. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[131]  W. Mcguire The Yin and Yang of Progress in Social Psychology: Seven Koan. , 1973 .

[132]  David M. Sanbonmatsu,et al.  On the automatic activation of attitudes. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[133]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Harvesting implicit group attitudes and beliefs from a demonstration web site , 2002 .

[134]  Curtis D. Hardin,et al.  Social influence effects on automatic racial prejudice. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[135]  N. Miller,et al.  The modern face of prejudice and structural features that moderate the effect of cooperation on affect. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[136]  J. Dovidio,et al.  Prejudice, Discrimination, and Racism , 1986 .

[137]  Richard L. Abrams,et al.  Three Cognitive Markers of Unconscious Semantic Activation , 1996, Science.