PsycEXTRA Dataset 2007
DOI: 10.1037/e659342007-001
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Implicit Misattribution as a Mechanism Underlying Evaluative Conditioning

Abstract: Evaluative conditioning (EC) refers to the formation or change of an attitude towards an object following that object's pairing with positively or negatively valenced stimuli. We provide evidence that EC can occur through an implicit misattribution mechanism in which an evaluative response evoked by a valenced stimulus is incorrectly and implicitly attributed to another stimulus, forming or changing an attitude towards this other stimulus. Five studies measured or manipulated variables related to the potential… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(116 citation statements)
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“…This prediction, however, is unsupported by the present finding that EC effects are relatively unaffected by variables related to feature overlap (i.e., a priori CS-US match, CS-US modality match). This does not imply that implicit misattribution or conceptual categorization may not operate in EC at all (for empirical support, see Jones et al, 2009). However, it is questionable whether implicit misattribution or conceptual categorization as explanatory mechanisms are by themselves strong and general enough to account for the full range of the present meta-analytic evidence.…”
Section: What Are the Processes Underlying Evaluative Conditioning?mentioning
confidence: 71%
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“…This prediction, however, is unsupported by the present finding that EC effects are relatively unaffected by variables related to feature overlap (i.e., a priori CS-US match, CS-US modality match). This does not imply that implicit misattribution or conceptual categorization may not operate in EC at all (for empirical support, see Jones et al, 2009). However, it is questionable whether implicit misattribution or conceptual categorization as explanatory mechanisms are by themselves strong and general enough to account for the full range of the present meta-analytic evidence.…”
Section: What Are the Processes Underlying Evaluative Conditioning?mentioning
confidence: 71%
“…According to these models, CS-US associations are formed and influence liking in an automatic manner, that is, regardless of whether participants are aware of the CS-US contingency. From the perspective of the misattribution account, the observed positive relation between contingency awareness and EC effects even goes in the opposite direction of what would be expected if one assumes that contingency awareness may offset the misattribution mechanism (Jones et al, 2009). The strong impact that contingency awareness has on EC is, however, entirely in line with a propositional account of EC.…”
Section: What Are the Processes Underlying Evaluative Conditioning?mentioning
confidence: 76%
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