To rule out an alternative to their structural-fit hypothesis, Payne, Burkley, and Stokes (2008) demonstrated that correlations between implicit and explicit race attitudes were weaker when participants were put under high pressure to respond without bias than when they were placed under low pressure. This effect was replicated in Italy by Vianello (2015), although the replication effect was smaller than the original effect. In the current investigation, we examined the possibility that the source of a study’s sample moderates this effect. Teams from eight universities, four in the United States and four in Italy, replicated the original study (replication N = 1,103). Although we did detect moderation by the sample’s country, it was due to a reversal of the original effect in the United States and a lack of the original effect in Italy. We discuss this curious finding and possible explanations.
Many Labs 5: Registered Replication of Payne, Burkley, and Stokes (2008), Study 4 / R Ebersole, Charles; Andrighetto, Luca; Casini, Erica; Chiorri, Carlo; Dalla Rosa, Anna; Domaneschi, Filippo; R Ferguson, Ian; Fryberger, Emily; Giacomantonio, Mauro; E Grahe, Jon; A Joy-Gaba, Jennifer; V Langford, Eleanor; Lee Nichols, Austin; Panno, Angelo; P Parks, Kimberly; Preti, Emanuele; Richetin, Juliette; Vianello, Michelangelo. - In: ADVANCES IN METHODS AND PRACTICES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 2515-2459. - (2020).
Many Labs 5: Registered Replication of Payne, Burkley, and Stokes (2008), Study 4
Mauro Giacomantonio;
2020
Abstract
To rule out an alternative to their structural-fit hypothesis, Payne, Burkley, and Stokes (2008) demonstrated that correlations between implicit and explicit race attitudes were weaker when participants were put under high pressure to respond without bias than when they were placed under low pressure. This effect was replicated in Italy by Vianello (2015), although the replication effect was smaller than the original effect. In the current investigation, we examined the possibility that the source of a study’s sample moderates this effect. Teams from eight universities, four in the United States and four in Italy, replicated the original study (replication N = 1,103). Although we did detect moderation by the sample’s country, it was due to a reversal of the original effect in the United States and a lack of the original effect in Italy. We discuss this curious finding and possible explanations.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.