Howe David, Anderson Rachel J, Dewhurst Stephen A
Psychology, School of Life Sciences, University of Hull, England.
Psychology, School of Life Sciences, University of Hull, England.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2017 Sep;179:14-22. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2017.07.002. Epub 2017 Jul 7.
Previous studies have found that false memories and false beliefs of childhood experiences can have attitudinal consequences. Previous studies have, however, focused exclusively on explicit attitude measures without exploring whether implicit attitudes are similarly affected. Using a false feedback/imagination inflation paradigm, false memories and beliefs of enjoying a certain food as a child were elicited in participants, and their effects were assessed using both explicit attitude measures (self-report questionnaires) and implicit measures (a Single-Target Implicit Association Test). Positive changes in explicit attitudes were observed both in participants with false memories and participants with false beliefs. In contrast, only participants with false memories exhibited more positive implicit attitudes. The findings are discussed in terms of theories of explicit and implicit attitudes.
以往的研究发现,对童年经历的错误记忆和错误信念可能会产生态度上的后果。然而,以往的研究仅专注于显性态度测量,而未探究隐性态度是否会受到类似影响。采用错误反馈/想象膨胀范式,在参与者中引发了对童年时喜欢某种食物的错误记忆和信念,并使用显性态度测量(自我报告问卷)和隐性测量(单目标内隐联想测验)对其影响进行了评估。在有错误记忆的参与者和有错误信念的参与者中均观察到显性态度的积极变化。相比之下,只有有错误记忆的参与者表现出更积极的隐性态度。研究结果根据显性和隐性态度理论进行了讨论。