42 research outputs found
Umwelteinflüsse an zwischenkalbezeit und selektionsmöglicwkeit
International audienc
Die bedeutung der melkbarkeit fĂĽr die selektion
International audienc
Survey-Software Implicit Association Tests: A Methodological and Empirical Analysis
This OSF project represents the home page for the 'survey-software' Implicit Association Test project by Carpenter et al. This includes (1) a manuscript preprint, (2) all supplemental materials for that preprint (materials, code, data), (3) all materials for making and analyzing survey-based IATs, and (4) an open software tool that automates our entire procedure
Survey-Software Implicit Association Tests: A Methodological and Empirical Analysis
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is widely used in psychology. Unfortunately, the IAT cannot be run within online surveys, requiring researchers who conduct online surveys to rely on third-party tools. We introduce a novel method for constructing IATs using online survey software (Qualtrics); we then empirically assess its validity. Study 1 (student n = 239) found good psychometric properties, expected IAT effects, and expected correlations with explicit measures for survey-software IATs. Study 2 (MTurk n = 818) found predicted IAT effects across four survey-software IATs (d’s = 0.82 [Black-White IAT] to 2.13 [insect-flower IAT]). Study 3 (MTurk n = 270) compared survey-software IATs and IATs run via Inquisit, yielding nearly identical results and intercorrelations expected for identical IATs. Survey-software IATs appear reliable and valid, offer numerous advantages, and make IATs accessible for researchers who use survey software to conduct online research. We present all materials, links to tutorials, and an open-source tool that rapidly automates survey-software IAT construction and analysis
Survey-Software Implicit Association Tests: A Methodological and Empirical Analysis
The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is widely used in psychology. Unfortunately, the IAT cannot be run within online surveys, requiring researchers who conduct online surveys to rely on third-party tools. We introduce a novel method for constructing IATs using online survey software (Qualtrics); we then empirically assess its validity. Study 1 (student n = 239) found good psychometric properties, expected IAT effects, and expected correlations with explicit measures for survey-software IATs. Study 2 (MTurk n = 818) found predicted IAT effects across four survey-software IATs (d’s = 0.82 [Black-White IAT] to 2.13 [insect-flower IAT]). Study 3 (MTurk n = 270) compared survey-software IATs and IATs run via Inquisit, yielding nearly identical results and intercorrelations expected for identical IATs. Survey-software IATs appear reliable and valid, offer numerous advantages, and make IATs accessible for researchers who use survey software to conduct online research. We present all materials, links to tutorials, and an open-source tool that rapidly automates survey-software IAT construction and analysis
iatgen: An Automated Tool for Building and Analyzing Survey-Based IATs
Our automated tool implements our entire procedure, with no need for manual code copy/pasting or editin