Tag: Implicit Research

Read posts about implicit research on Sentient Decision Science’s implicit market research blog.

Protecting the Science: Evaluative Priming for Consumer Insights

Russ Fazio and colleagues are often cited for some of the first applications of priming techniques in the study of social cognition (1986; 1995). An evaluative priming exercise (EP) is a technique that reveals the implicit associations between concepts by priming participants with images (or words) and having participants sort words (or images) into categories […]

Protecting the Science: The Implicit Association Test to Evaluate Consumer Subconscious

Implicit research measures are appropriately defined as those that are indirect, not deliberate, uncontrolled and unintentional in nature. The Implicit Association Test (IAT) largely fits these criteria of being implicit. The measure is indirect, not deliberate, and relatively difficult to control (but see, Jones et. al. 2009 for some exceptions). The original IAT is the […]

Protecting the Science of Implicit Research Technology

Researchers and insights managers were given a dual role at this year’s The Market Research Event (#TMRE13): “Protecting the Science of Understanding while Translating Insight into Confident Business Decisions.” Whew! That’s a mouthful.

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