When knowledge activated from memory intrudes on probabilistic inferences from description - the case of stereotypes
Abstract
To make decisions in probabilistic inference tasks, individuals integrate relevant information partly in an automatic manner. Thereby, potentially irrelevant stimuli that are additionally presented can intrude on the decision process (e.g., Söllner, Bröder, Glöckner, & Betsch, 2014). We investigate whether such an intrusion effect can also be caused by potentially irrelevant or even misleading knowledge activated from memory. In four studies...
Paper Details
Title
When knowledge activated from memory intrudes on probabilistic inferences from description - the case of stereotypes
Published Date
Oct 1, 2017
Journal
Volume
180
Pages
64 - 78
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