Faking of the Implicit Association Test Is Statistically Detectable and Partly Correctable

Male and female participants were instructed to produce an altered response pattern on an Implicit Association Test measure of gender identity by slowing performance in trials requiring the same response to stimuli designating own gender and self. Participants' faking success was found to be pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Basic and applied social psychology 2010-11, Vol.32 (4), p.302-314
Hauptverfasser: Cvencek, Dario, Greenwald, Anthony G., Brown, Anthony S., Gray, Nicola S., Snowden, Robert J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Male and female participants were instructed to produce an altered response pattern on an Implicit Association Test measure of gender identity by slowing performance in trials requiring the same response to stimuli designating own gender and self. Participants' faking success was found to be predictable by a measure of slowing relative to unfaked performances. This combined task slowing (CTS) indicator was then applied in reanalyses of three experiments from other laboratories, two involving instructed faking and one involving possibly motivated faking. Across all studies involving instructed faking, CTS correctly classified 75% of intentionally faking participants. Using the CTS index to adjust faked Implicit Association Test scores increased the correlation of CTS-adjusted measures with known group membership, relative to unadjusted (i.e., faked) measures.
ISSN:0197-3533
1532-4834
DOI:10.1080/01973533.2010.519236