Literature DB >> 29173140

The Mere Exposure Instruction Effect.

Pieter Van Dessel1, Gaëtan Mertens2, Colin Tucker Smith3, Jan De Houwer1.   

Abstract

The mere exposure effect refers to the well-established finding that people evaluate a stimulus more positively after repeated exposure to that stimulus. We investigated whether a change in stimulus evaluation can occur also when participants are not repeatedly exposed to a stimulus, but are merely instructed that one stimulus will occur frequently and another stimulus will occur infrequently. We report seven experiments showing that (1) mere exposure instructions influence implicit stimulus evaluations as measured with an Implicit Association Test (IAT), personalized Implicit Association Test (pIAT), or Affect Misattribution Procedure (AMP), but not with an Evaluative Priming Task (EPT), (2) mere exposure instructions influence explicit evaluations, and (3) the instruction effect depends on participants' memory of which stimulus will be presented more frequently. We discuss how these findings inform us about the boundary conditions of mere exposure instruction effects, as well as the mental processes that underlie mere exposure and mere exposure instruction effects.

Entities:  

Keywords:  IAT; evaluative priming; implicit evaluation; instructions; mere exposure

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29173140     DOI: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000376

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Psychol        ISSN: 1618-3169


  1 in total

1.  Effects on the Affect Misattribution Procedure are strongly moderated by influence awareness.

Authors:  Sean Hughes; Jamie Cummins; Ian Hussey
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2022-06-10
  1 in total

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