The Experts below are selected from a list of 22287 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform
Lu Wang - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by...
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by stimulating analytic thinking. In Study 1, we established the validity of the current paradigm in inducing the Halo Effect. In Study 2 and Study 3, we investigated whether the Halo Effect could be reduced when analytic thinking was activated either with Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices or with a writing task. Results of both studies showed that participants were less biased by the irrelevant central trait when analytic thinking was activated compared to the control group, suggesting that priming analytic thinking ahead of a judgmental task can reduce the Halo Effect.
Wen Wen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by...
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by stimulating analytic thinking. In Study 1, we established the validity of the current paradigm in inducing the Halo Effect. In Study 2 and Study 3, we investigated whether the Halo Effect could be reduced when analytic thinking was activated either with Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices or with a writing task. Results of both studies showed that participants were less biased by the irrelevant central trait when analytic thinking was activated compared to the control group, suggesting that priming analytic thinking ahead of a judgmental task can reduce the Halo Effect.
Gilles Ivaldi - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Contextual Effects of Immigrant Presence on Populist Radical Right Support: Testing the “Halo Effect” on Front National Voting in France
Comparative Political Studies, 2020Co-Authors: Jocelyn Evans, Gilles IvaldiAbstract:This paper examines the relationship between immigration and populist radical right (PRR) support, based on an analysis of the contextual Effects of immigrant presence on Front National vote in France in 2017. Using a unique set of survey data geolocalising respondents at the subcommunal level, it finds evidence for the existence of a curvilinear “Halo Effect,” with substantial increases in the probability of PRR vote in areas surrounding communities with significantly higher-than-average immigrant populations, and independent of other socio-economic context, as well as individual socio-demographic characteristics. Most importantly, a path analysis confirms the presence of individual attitudinal mediators of this Halo Effect on PRR vote, thus testing the foundation of the Halo, namely that the contextual Effects of immigrant presence act on attitudes which drive PRR support. These findings provide a significant step forward in understanding the mechanisms linking subjective experience of immigration with voting for the populist radical right.
Cheng Huang - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by...
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by stimulating analytic thinking. In Study 1, we established the validity of the current paradigm in inducing the Halo Effect. In Study 2 and Study 3, we investigated whether the Halo Effect could be reduced when analytic thinking was activated either with Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices or with a writing task. Results of both studies showed that participants were less biased by the irrelevant central trait when analytic thinking was activated compared to the control group, suggesting that priming analytic thinking ahead of a judgmental task can reduce the Halo Effect.
George Kyriacou Georgiou - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by...
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Reducing the Halo Effect by Stimulating Analytic Thinking
Social Psychology, 2020Co-Authors: Wen Wen, George Kyriacou Georgiou, Cheng Huang, Lu WangAbstract:Abstract. The Halo Effect is one of the most common threats to interpersonal evaluation. In the present study, we examined the role of an alternative approach to reducing the Halo Effect, namely by stimulating analytic thinking. In Study 1, we established the validity of the current paradigm in inducing the Halo Effect. In Study 2 and Study 3, we investigated whether the Halo Effect could be reduced when analytic thinking was activated either with Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices or with a writing task. Results of both studies showed that participants were less biased by the irrelevant central trait when analytic thinking was activated compared to the control group, suggesting that priming analytic thinking ahead of a judgmental task can reduce the Halo Effect.