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Propositional accounts of implicit evaluation: Taking stock and looking ahead
[post]
2020
unpublished
Associative accounts suggest that implicit (indirectly measured) evaluations are sensitive primarily to co-occurrence information (e.g., pairings of gorges with positive experiences) and are represented associatively (e.g., GORGE–NICE). By contrast, recent propositional accounts have argued that implicit evaluations are also responsive to relational information (e.g., gorges causing vs. preventing ennui) and are represented propositionally (e.g., "I find gorges fascinating"). In a review of 30
doi:10.31234/osf.io/b4tfe
fatcat:4vtqfbvmjbhxraj7zcwfhsyr7e