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Meta-Analysis of the Mere Exposure Effect |
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Posted by: | R. Matthew Montoya |
Title/Position: | Assistant Professor of Psychology |
School/Organization: | University of Dayton |
Sent to listserv of: | SPSP, SESP, SPSSI |
Date posted: | September 18th, 2012 |
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Dear SPSP Listserv,
We are in the process of conducting a meta-analysis on the mere exposure effect. In order to minimize the biased sampling of only published studies (i.e., the file drawer problem), we are asking investigators for their results of any of their unpublished studies employing the mere exposure effect.
If drafts of articles on the mere exposure effect have already been prepared we would, of course, be most grateful for copies; but we are also interested in the results of studies that have not been written up, but consist of statistical data such as means, standard deviations, and sample sizes.
We are interested in:
* Studies that "merely expose" participants to stimuli, then measures liking, recognition, familiarity, truth, fame, or other related concept.
* Studies that include *at least* three levels of exposure. For example, rather than studies that manipulate "previously exposed or not (0 and 1 levels of exposure)," we are interested in those studies in which participants were exposed to stimuli, say, zero, one, and five times (0, 1, and 5).
Please send us copies of any of your unpublished papers or data, brief references to your published (or in press) papers. I would be especially grateful if researchers could reply to this posting within a week or so.
Please send any databases or papers to matt.montoya@udayton.edu. If you have any questions or would like more details, please contact me!
Thank you very much,
Matt
R. Matthew Montoya
Assistant Professor of Psychology
University of Dayton
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