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The malleability of stigmatising attitudes: combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback

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The malleability of stigmatising attitudes: combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback. / Pennington, Charlotte Rebecca; Campbell, Claire; Monk, Rebecca et al.
In: American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Vol. 19, No. 3, 19.08.2016, p. 175-195.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pennington, CR, Campbell, C, Monk, R & Heim, D 2016, 'The malleability of stigmatising attitudes: combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback', American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 175-195. https://doi.org/10.1080/15487768.2016.1171175

APA

Vancouver

Pennington CR, Campbell C, Monk R, Heim D. The malleability of stigmatising attitudes: combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback. American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation. 2016 Aug 19;19(3):175-195. Epub 2016 Aug 19. doi: 10.1080/15487768.2016.1171175

Author

Pennington, Charlotte Rebecca ; Campbell, Claire ; Monk, Rebecca et al. / The malleability of stigmatising attitudes : combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback. In: American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation. 2016 ; Vol. 19, No. 3. pp. 175-195.

Bibtex

@article{f318a3febe6946bdaa0ab06d88ddcc22,
title = "The malleability of stigmatising attitudes: combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback",
abstract = "Research is reported that examines whether imagined social contact combined with implicit attitude feedback may be an effective intervention for inducing changes in attitudes toward mental ill health. The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) captured participants{\textquoteright} implicit attitudes toward individuals with a mental illness and provided a measure of attitude bias. Forty-eight participants (17 male, 95.8% White British) were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions: (1) Imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback, (2) imagined social contact without feedback, (3) control with feedback, and (4) control without feedback. This resulted in a data set detailing 12,288 implicit responses, with each participant completing 256 IRAP trials. Participants then completed an attitude change assessment 24 hours later. Results revealed that imagined social contact was successful in changing implicit attitudes, with the addition of implicit attitude feedback further strengthening participants{\textquoteright} positive attitudes toward mental ill health. Explicit attitudes remained unaffected. These findings are the first to highlight the practical importance of combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback to improve attitudes toward out-groups who are stigmatized.",
keywords = "Attitude change, explicit attitudes, implicit association test, implicit attitudes, implicit relational assessment procedure, mental illness, public stigma",
author = "Pennington, {Charlotte Rebecca} and Claire Campbell and Rebecca Monk and Derek Heim",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1080/15487768.2016.1171175",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "175--195",
journal = "American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation",
issn = "1548-7776",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The malleability of stigmatising attitudes

T2 - combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback

AU - Pennington, Charlotte Rebecca

AU - Campbell, Claire

AU - Monk, Rebecca

AU - Heim, Derek

PY - 2016/8/19

Y1 - 2016/8/19

N2 - Research is reported that examines whether imagined social contact combined with implicit attitude feedback may be an effective intervention for inducing changes in attitudes toward mental ill health. The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) captured participants’ implicit attitudes toward individuals with a mental illness and provided a measure of attitude bias. Forty-eight participants (17 male, 95.8% White British) were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions: (1) Imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback, (2) imagined social contact without feedback, (3) control with feedback, and (4) control without feedback. This resulted in a data set detailing 12,288 implicit responses, with each participant completing 256 IRAP trials. Participants then completed an attitude change assessment 24 hours later. Results revealed that imagined social contact was successful in changing implicit attitudes, with the addition of implicit attitude feedback further strengthening participants’ positive attitudes toward mental ill health. Explicit attitudes remained unaffected. These findings are the first to highlight the practical importance of combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback to improve attitudes toward out-groups who are stigmatized.

AB - Research is reported that examines whether imagined social contact combined with implicit attitude feedback may be an effective intervention for inducing changes in attitudes toward mental ill health. The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) captured participants’ implicit attitudes toward individuals with a mental illness and provided a measure of attitude bias. Forty-eight participants (17 male, 95.8% White British) were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions: (1) Imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback, (2) imagined social contact without feedback, (3) control with feedback, and (4) control without feedback. This resulted in a data set detailing 12,288 implicit responses, with each participant completing 256 IRAP trials. Participants then completed an attitude change assessment 24 hours later. Results revealed that imagined social contact was successful in changing implicit attitudes, with the addition of implicit attitude feedback further strengthening participants’ positive attitudes toward mental ill health. Explicit attitudes remained unaffected. These findings are the first to highlight the practical importance of combining imagined social contact with implicit attitude feedback to improve attitudes toward out-groups who are stigmatized.

KW - Attitude change

KW - explicit attitudes

KW - implicit association test

KW - implicit attitudes

KW - implicit relational assessment procedure

KW - mental illness

KW - public stigma

U2 - 10.1080/15487768.2016.1171175

DO - 10.1080/15487768.2016.1171175

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 175

EP - 195

JO - American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation

JF - American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation

SN - 1548-7776

IS - 3

ER -