4.6 Article

Patterns of Implicit and Explicit Attitudes: I. Long-Term Change and Stability From 2007 to 2016

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 174-192

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797618813087

Keywords

implicit attitude change; implicit association test; long-term change; time-series analysis; open data; open materials

Funding

  1. Harvard University's Dean's Competitive Fund for Promising Scholarship

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Using 4.4 million tests of implicit and explicit attitudes measured continuously from an Internet population of U.S. respondents over 13 years, we conducted the first comparative analysis using time-series models to examine patterns of long-term change in six social-group attitudes: sexual orientation, race, skin tone, age, disability, and body weight. Even within just a decade, all explicit responses showed change toward attitude neutrality. Parallel implicit responses also showed change toward neutrality for sexual orientation, race, and skin-tone attitudes but revealed stability over time for age and disability attitudes and change away from neutrality for body-weight attitudes. These data provide previously unavailable evidence for long-term implicit attitude change and stability across multiple social groups; the data can be used to generate and test theoretical predictions as well as construct forecasts of future attitudes.

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