Fazio R H, Williams C J
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1986 Sep;51(3):505-14. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.51.3.505.
It was hypothesized that the extent to which individuals' attitudes guide their subsequent perceptions of and behavior toward the attitude object is a function of the accessibility of those attitudes from memory. A field investigation concerning the 1984 presidential election was conducted as a test of these hypotheses. Attitudes toward each of the two candidates, Reagan and Mondale, and the accessibility of those attitudes, as indicated by the latency of response to the attitudinal inquiry, were measured for a large sample of townspeople months before the election. Judgments of the performance of the candidates during the televised debates served as the measure of subsequent perceptions, and voting served as the measure of subsequent behavior. As predicted, both the attitude-perception and the attitude-behavior relations were moderated by attitude accessibility. The implications of these findings for theoretical models of the processes by which attitudes guide behavior, along with their practical implications for survey research, are discussed.
研究假设,个体态度引导其随后对态度对象的认知及行为的程度,是这些态度从记忆中提取的可及性的一个函数。针对1984年总统选举开展了一项实地调查,以此检验这些假设。在选举前数月,对大量城镇居民样本测量了对两位候选人里根和蒙代尔各自的态度,以及通过对态度询问的反应潜伏期所表明的这些态度的可及性。候选人在电视辩论中的表现评判作为随后认知的量度,投票作为随后行为的量度。正如所预测的,态度-认知关系和态度-行为关系均受到态度可及性的调节。讨论了这些发现对态度引导行为过程的理论模型的意义,以及它们对调查研究的实际意义。