.@EmilyGRitchie also reports that counterstereotypical interventions reduced bias on indirect measures, but moreso when "spaced" across multiple days—an interaction that is not well explained by memory. Aligns with "Duration ...and debiasing (Byrd, 2019)
@DrMeltemYucel I’ll be on that hill (or at least on the same mountain range of uninformative labels). 🔒 https://t.co/aHYkAJ3HHc 🔓 https://t.co/jfu8XcHmFT https://t.co/dEOxfd368x
Michael Olson (Tennessee) shared obstacles, progress in "...Evidence of Implicit Evaluative Conditioning": - "Implicit" ≠ Unconscious (https://t.co/nFz1gpemIj) - Manipulating implicit ≠ manipulating ONLY implicit (ibid.) - Identity ≠ valence - Surveillanc
@kevin_dorst Debiasing implicit bias: - Madva 2017: https://t.co/y5yoc6lkso - Byrd 2019: https://t.co/aHYkAJ3HHc Debiasing more generally: https://t.co/cOHA6UCKKu
@MetacogniShane Yes. "Reflective/unreflective" is definitely another way of saying "Type II/Type I". But not just. Labels like 'reflective' and 'unreflective' are far more memorable and informative than 'Type 1' and 'Type 2'. Screenshot from earlier in B
@tatter_rags @WilCunningham @R__INDEX Fun debate about the IAT and related theory! Lots to follow-up on: 1. RE: reliability - the IAT could reliably measure something that is unstable 2. RE: 'unconscious, automatic, etc.' - these and other dual process d
- Strong evidence suggests that implicit bias is associative (😶) and sometimes reflective (😮). #associationism - If new/overlooked strong evidence suggests otherwise, then implicit bias is not only associative or only non-associative. It's both. #interacti
What We Can (And Can’t) Infer About Implicit Bias From Debiasing Experiments https://t.co/klDqVrYW8R