Attitude accessibility and motivation as determinants of biased processing : a test of the Motivation and Opportunity as DEterminants MODE model.

Author(s)
Schuette, R.A. & Fazio, R.H.
Year
Abstract

The roles of attitude accessibility and motivation in the biased processing of information were examined as a test of the MODE model. Subjects evaluated two studies with conflicting conclusions regarding capital punishment's crime deterrence efficacy. Attitude accessibility was manipulated by having subjects express their death penalty attitudes either once (low accessibility) or repeatedly (high accessibility) during an initial phase of the experiment. Motivation was manipulated via fear of invalidity; half the subjects were told their evaluations of the capital punishment studies would be publicly compared to an expert panel's conclusions. The relation between attitude and judgement was found to depend on both attitude accessibility and motivation. Judgements were more attitudinally congruent in the low-fear-of-invalidity/repeated-expression condition than in the other conditions. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 7802 [electronic version only] /01 /
Source

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 21 (1995), No. 7 (July), p. 704-710, 20 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.