La duperie volontaire d’un Test d’Associations Implicites (IAT) d’estime de soi: Effets des informations données aux sujets et de leur familiarité avec le dispositif = The deliberate deception of a self-esteem Implicit Associations Test: Effects of the information given to the subjects and their familiarity with the device
Contenu
Titre
La duperie volontaire d’un Test d’Associations Implicites (IAT) d’estime de soi: Effets des informations données aux sujets et de leur familiarité avec le dispositif = The deliberate deception of a self-esteem Implicit Associations Test: Effects of the information given to the subjects and their familiarity with the device
Swiss Journal of Psychology / Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Psychologie / Revue Suisse de Psychologie
Créateur
Delphine Chassard
Jean-Luc Kop
Marie-Laure Pillerel
Sujet
Deception
Faking
Familiarity
IAT
Implicit Association Test
Self-Esteem
Test Validity
deception
fakeability
familiarity
indirect measures
self-esteem
validity
Résumé
The Implicit Association Test (IAT, Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998) provides indirect measurements, which are supposed to prevent voluntary control of answers by subjects. However, a systematic review of the empirical tests offers divergent results. This paper studies if it is possible to deliberately deceive a self-esteem IAT depending on whether subjects are given information on the strategy to be used or not and according to their acquaintance with the test. Results show that almost all subjects are able to control their answers to the IAT if they are provided an efficient strategy; only a part of naïve subjects succeed in it. These results are discussed in reference to the use of the IAT in basic and applied research. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
volume
68
numéro
4
pages
201-211
Date
décembre 2009
Titre abrégé
Swiss Journal of Psychology / Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Psychologie / Revue Suisse de Psychologie
doi
10.1024/1421-0185.68.4.201
issn
1421-0185
uri
Editeur
pdh
Source
2009-23195-004