Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
about
sameAs
The effects of name and religious priming on ratings of a well-known political figure, President Barack Obama.Of animals and objects: men's implicit dehumanization of women and likelihood of sexual aggression.Race, ideology, and the tea party: a longitudinal studyDecisions among the undecided: implicit attitudes predict future voting behavior of undecided voters.GRace: a MATLAB-based application for fitting the discrimination-association model.Stress-testing the affect misattribution procedure: Heterogeneous control of affect misattribution procedure effects under incentives.Selective exposure in decided and undecided individuals: differential relations to automatic associations and conscious beliefs.Examining Implicit and Explicit Evaluations of Sexual Aggression and Sexually Aggressive Behavior in Men Recruited Online.The "emotion misattribution" procedure: processing beyond good and bad under masked and unmasked presentation conditions.Neurolaw: Differential brain activity for black and white faces predicts damage awards in hypothetical employment discrimination cases.A single exposure to the American flag shifts support toward Republicanism up to 8 months later.Reporting intentional rating of the primes predicts priming effects in the affective misattribution procedure.Policy Implications of Implicit Social CognitionThe Minnesota Multi-Investigator 2012 Presidential Election Panel StudyRacial Attitudes Predicted Changes in Ostensibly Race-Neutral Political Attitudes Under the Obama AdministrationAttitudes Toward Blacks in the Obama EraThe Role of Implicit Attitudes in Populist Radical-Right Support
P2860
Q33860396-7BD98A77-73C7-4A31-A8D7-59468C6E3592Q34257454-D21D03CC-4FAF-4959-A072-1CCA45C5454AQ34794720-1F3A5937-7A82-4B23-B1F4-5F1FB01DA73CQ37529176-2E038A43-6088-46E2-8A89-25683CDCDC6CQ40857956-F462790A-311C-4C4D-AF49-E7EE7A70042EQ46415880-FC38762D-3965-463C-8876-578B0141AD31Q47220532-43B82BBC-F4EF-4AD4-B92A-A0922E18AA47Q47614956-4321B6B7-8091-4C0D-B112-FB0CD3D90AFAQ47901013-EA737CC2-E847-4B1B-987C-FCECCC0D9954Q48296320-27F6F088-A90C-4952-86EF-20CCDA137EFBQ48632560-28C01F85-5117-4A31-87F7-030967EB019CQ50579052-A103CCDC-B7EF-4772-B30A-5281391EFB01Q53464641-E8CA67C7-3BFE-44C4-B78F-0A6D6CFB2571Q56963909-47B8D289-84AF-4F92-9AD6-3529C3DFD9DAQ57516382-69DC251D-890A-4810-98F9-972EC7384581Q57516399-BEE71460-7C91-4070-920D-59F941DAE933Q57770429-DF879A16-0C8A-4A2C-AE51-02513381EB3A
P2860
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
description
im Dezember 2009 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в грудні 2009
@uk
name
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@en
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@nl
type
label
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@en
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@nl
prefLabel
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@en
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@nl
P50
P1476
Implicit Race Attitudes Predicted Vote in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
@en
P2093
Anthony G. Greenwald
P304
P356
10.1111/J.1530-2415.2009.01195.X
P577
2009-12-01T00:00:00Z