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Meta-Analysis on Implicit Bias Change |
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Posted by: | Margo Monteith |
Title/Position: | Professor |
School/Organization: | Purdue University |
Sent to listserv of: | SPSP, SESP, SPSSI |
Date posted: | May 12th, 2010 |
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Dear Colleagues,
We are conducting a meta-analysis that examines the effects of various types of experiences on the magnitude of people's automatically activated stereotypes or prejudices. We are writing in the hopes that researchers will help us in identifying relevant studies that have either ended up in the "file drawer" or are currently unpublished.
We are specifically interested in experimental research using a manipulation to influence automatically activated bias (e.g., manipulations of contexts, social roles, training or practice to reduce bias, imagery, etc.) or quasi-experimental research (e.g., comparing Ps who complete a diversity-related course to control Ps). In addition, we are focusing on automatically activated biases related to social categories (e.g. race, gender, sexual orientation, ingroups vs. outgroups, etc.) that use a measure that taps into implicit processes (e.g., IAT, priming, Lexical Decision Task) or at minimum is an indirect measure of bias (e.g., word fragment completion).
If you have any unpublished work that might be of interest, we would greatly appreciate your writing to us with a brief description and/or sending a copy of the research (e.g., unpublished papers, conference posters, informal write-ups). Please respond to Monteith.Labs@gmail.com.
Thank you in advance for any help you may be able to provide!
Sincerely,
Margo Monteith
Anna Woodcock
Jill Lybarger
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