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A Multi-Site Collaborative Study of the Hostile Priming Effect
Author(s) -
Randy J. McCarthy,
Will M. Gervais,
Balázs Aczél,
Rosemary L. AlKire,
Mark Aveyard,
Silvia Marcella Baraldo,
Lemi Baruh,
Charlotte Basch,
Anna Baumert,
Anna Maria C. Behler,
Ann Bettencourt,
Adam Bitar,
Hugo Bouxom,
Ashley Buck,
Zeynep Cemalcılar,
Peggy Chekroun,
Jacqueline M. Chen,
Ángel del Fresno- Díaz,
Alec Ducham,
John E. Edlund,
Amanda ElBassiouny,
Thomas Rhys Evans,
Patrick J. Ewell,
Patrick S. Forscher,
Paul T. Fuglestad,
Lauren Hauck,
Christopher E. Hawk,
Anthony D. Hermann,
Bryon Hines,
Mukunzi Irumva,
Lauren Jordan,
Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba,
Catherine Haley,
Pavol Kačmár,
Murat Kezer,
Robert Körner,
Muriel Kosaka,
Márton Kovács,
Elicia C. Lair,
JeanBaptiste Légal,
Dana C. Leighton,
Michael Magee,
Keith D. Markman,
Marcel Martončik,
Martin Müller,
Jasmine Norman,
Jerome Olsen,
Danielle L. Oyler,
Curtis E. Phills,
Gianni Ribeiro,
Alia Rohain,
John Kitchener Sakaluk,
Astrid Schütz,
Daniel ToribioFlórez,
JoAnn Tsang,
Michela Vezzoli,
Caitlin Williams,
Guillermo B. Willis,
Jason Young,
Cristina Zogmaister
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
collabra psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2474-7394
DOI - 10.1525/collabra.18738
Subject(s) - priming (agriculture) , replication (statistics) , psychology , zero (linguistics) , cognition , social psychology , cognitive psychology , mathematics , statistics , linguistics , biology , philosophy , botany , germination , neuroscience
In a now-classic study by Srull and Wyer (1979), people who were exposed to phrases with hostile content subsequently judged a man as being more hostile. And this “hostile priming effect” has had a significant influence on the field of social cognition over the subsequent decades. However, a recent multi-lab collaborative study (McCarthy et al., 2018) that closely followed the methods described by Srull and Wyer (1979) found a hostile priming effect that was nearly zero, which casts doubt on whether these methods reliably produce an effect. To address some limitations with McCarthy et al. (2018), the current multi-site collaborative study included data collected from 29 labs. Each lab conducted a close replication (total N = 2,123) and a conceptual replication (total N = 2,579) of Srull and Wyer’s methods. The hostile priming effect for both the close replication (d = 0.09, 95% CI [-0.04, 0.22], z = 1.34, p = .16) and the conceptual replication (d = 0.05, 95% CI [-0.04, 0.15], z = 1.15, p = .58) were not significantly different from zero and, if the true effects are non-zero, were smaller than what most labs could feasibly and routinely detect. Despite our best efforts to produce favorable conditions for the effect to emerge, we did not detect a hostile priming effect. We suggest that researchers should not invest more resources into trying to detect a hostile priming effect using methods like those described in Srull and Wyer (1979).

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