Attitudes towards individuals with disabilities as measured by the Implicit Association Test: A literature review

•Moderate to strong negative implicit attitudes were evident.•Studies exploring implicit attitudes towards intellectual disabilities were lacking.•There was little to no association between explicit and implicit attitudes.•Prior contact and disease sensitivity were associated with implicit attitudes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Research in developmental disabilities 2014-02, Vol.35 (2), p.294-321
Hauptverfasser: Wilson, Michelle Clare, Scior, Katrina
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Moderate to strong negative implicit attitudes were evident.•Studies exploring implicit attitudes towards intellectual disabilities were lacking.•There was little to no association between explicit and implicit attitudes.•Prior contact and disease sensitivity were associated with implicit attitudes.•Methodological issues (e.g., in sampling and measures used) limit generalizability. Research investigating attitudes towards individuals with disabilities has largely focused on self-reported explicit attitudes. Given that factors such as social desirability may influence explicit attitudes, researchers have developed tools which instead assess less consciously controllable implicit attitudes. Considering research on implicit attitudes thus seems pertinent. A review of studies measuring implicit attitudes towards individuals with physical disabilities (visual, motor or hearing) or intellectual disabilities via the Implicit Association Test (IAT; Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998) was carried out. Systematic searches of PsycINFO, CINAHL, EMBASE, ERIC, MEDLINE, PUBMED, Scopus and Web of Science databases identified relevant articles published between January 2000 and September 2012. Seventeen articles (reporting on 18 studies that employed the IAT) were identified. These investigated implicit attitudes towards individuals with; physical disabilities (N=13), intellectual disabilities (N=3), both physical and intellectual disabilities (N=1), and ‘unspecified disabilities’ (N=1). Across all studies, moderate to strong negative implicit attitudes were found and there was little to no association between explicit and implicit attitudes. Individuals’ beliefs about the controllability of their future, sensitivity to the concept of disease, and contact with individuals with disabilities appear to be associated with implicit attitudes. A consistent pattern of moderate to strong negative implicit attitudes towards individuals with disabilities was evident. These studies provide a starting point, but methodological issues related to sampling and the employed IATs limit the generalizability of these results. Further research investigating implicit attitudes towards specific disability types, with a wider subject pool are necessary as well as further investigation of factors that contribute to these attitudes.
ISSN:0891-4222
1873-3379
DOI:10.1016/j.ridd.2013.11.003