Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
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A System Computational Model of Implicit Emotional Learning.Regressive research: The pitfalls of post hoc data selection in the study of unconscious mental processes.Evaluative Conditioning: The "How" Question.Involvement of the Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex in Learning Others' Bad Reputations and Indelible Distrust.Positive mood + action = negative mood + inaction: effects of general action and inaction concepts on decisions and performance as a function of affect.Changing how I feel about the food: experimentally manipulated affective associations with fruits change fruit choice behaviors.The role of awareness in attitude formation through evaluative conditioning.Emotion and persuasion: cognitive and meta-cognitive processes impact attitudes.Intuitive (in)coherence judgments are guided by processing fluency, mood and affect.Incidental mood state before dissonance induction affects attitude change.Subliminal influence on preferences? A test of evaluative conditioning for brief visual conditioned stimuli using auditory unconditioned stimuli.Inhibition of Lateral Prefrontal Cortex Produces Emotionally Biased First Impressions: A Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Electroencephalography Study.Emotion Decoding and Incidental Processing Fluency as Antecedents of Attitude Certainty.Wanting to Be Different Predicts Nonmotivated Change: Actual-Desired Self-Discrepancies and Susceptibility to Subtle Change Inductions.Motivation modulates the effect of approach on implicit preferences.Duration perception of emotional stimuli: Using evaluative conditioning to avoid sensory confounds.Learning to Dislike Chocolate: Conditioning Negative Attitudes toward Chocolate and Its Effect on Chocolate Consumption.Simultaneous conditioning of valence and arousal.Evaluative conditioning and conscious knowledge of contingencies: a correlational investigation with large samples.Is the devil in the detail? Evidence for S-S learning after unconditional stimulus revaluation in human evaluative conditioning under a broader set of experimental conditions.Attitude Accessibility as a Function of Emotionality.When congruence breeds preference: the influence of selective attention processes on evaluative conditioning.The effect of comparative context on evaluative conditioning.Dual-task interference in evaluative conditioning: Similarity matters!What you see is what will change: evaluative conditioning effects depend on a focus on valence.Is evaluative conditioning really resistant to extinction? Evidence for changes in evaluative judgements without changes in evaluative representations.Indirect measures as a signal for evaluative change.Evaluative conditioning may occur with and without contingency awareness.Self-ambivalence and resistance to subtle self-change attempts.Affect and Cognition: Three PrinciplesIgnorance reflects preference: the influence of selective ignoring on evaluative conditioning
P2860
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P2860
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
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article científic
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article scientifique
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articolo scientifico
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artigo científico
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bilimsel makale
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scientific article published on May 2009
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vedecký článok
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vetenskaplig artikel
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videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
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Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
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type
label
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
@en
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
@nl
prefLabel
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
@en
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
@en
P2093
Christopher R Jones
Michael A Olson
Russell H Fazio
P2860
P304
P356
10.1037/A0014747
P577
2009-05-01T00:00:00Z