On the automatic activation of associated evaluations: An overview
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Cognition and Emotion
- Vol. 15 (2) , 115-141
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02699930125908
Abstract
A review of the literature concerning the phenomenon known as automatic attitude activation is presented. The robustness of the affective priming effect across many different procedural variations, the mediating mechanisms thought to underlie the effect, and the moderating role of associative strength are discussed. The relevance and importance of automatic attitude activation to many fundamental cognitive and social processes also is highlighted. Finally, an overview of the articles included in this Special Issue of Cognition and Emotion, their essential contributions, and their relation to the earlier literature is presented.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activation and Inhibition of Affective Information: for Negative Priming in the Evaluation TaskCognition and Emotion, 1999
- Odours as Affective-processing Context for Word Evaluation: A Case of Cross-modal Affective PrimingCognition and Emotion, 1998
- An Affective Variant of the Simon ParadigmCognition and Emotion, 1998
- Attitude Accessibility and Motivation as Determinants of Biased Processing: A Test of the MODE ModelPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1995
- The affective priming effect: Automatic activation of evaluative information in memoryCognition and Emotion, 1994
- On the Functional Value of Attitudes: The Influence of Accessible Attitudes on the Ease and Quality of Decision MakingPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1992
- Semantic and emotional priming below objective detection thresholdCognition and Emotion, 1992
- Biased Processing as a Function of Attitude Accessibility: Making Objective Judgments SubjectivelySocial Cognition, 1989
- Attitude Accessibility as a Function of Repeated Attitudinal ExpressionPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1984
- Role of prior knowledge on naming and lexical decisions with good and poor stimulus information.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1978